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Susannah Fox

I help people navigate health and technology.

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Fact checking at Medicine X

October 5, 2012 By Susannah Fox 32 Comments

Pew Internet: Internet Help vs. Harm

I had the great honor of being part of the first Medicine X conference at Stanford University last weekend. I presented a sneak preview of new survey results collected by the Pew Internet Project and the California HealthCare Foundation. Overall, the conference was magical, as I wrote in a previous post. In this post I […]

Filed Under: ethics, trends & principles, understanding statistics Tagged With: Pew Internet, Stanford Medicine X

The magic of Medicine X

October 2, 2012 By Susannah Fox 20 Comments

Larry Chu and the Stanford Medicine X volunteers

Stanford Medicine X ended on Sunday after three (very) full days. Larry Chu deserves much of the credit for what I like about Medicine X, an “academic conference designed for everyone.” E-patients made up 10% of the audience and I appreciated their participation on stage, at the microphones, and on Twitter. There were also clinicians, […]

Filed Under: key people, net-friendly docs, positive patterns Tagged With: Larry Chu, Stanford Medicine X

Listening to patients at Medicine 2.0

September 18, 2012 By Susannah Fox Leave a Comment

I wrote a long post on e-patients.net about my one day at Medicine 2.0 on Saturday. Here are a few highlights — people who focused on listening to patients and caregivers: “To learn listen well to impressions voiced by patients first” – Sally Okun of PatientsLikeMe closed her presentation with this poem.

Filed Under: patient networks, pts as teachers Tagged With: diabetes, hospice, medicine 2.0, patientslikeme

Learning to type (and not to typecast)

September 13, 2012 By Susannah Fox 9 Comments

Close up of IBM keyboard

“…even the most money-hungry, wannabe apolitical technologist needs to understand the role that social power plays in technology adoption.” – Alexis Madrigal writing about Why the First Laptop Had Such a Hard Time Catching On (Hint: Sexism). Secretaries (women) knew how to use a keyboard, not executives (men), so the adoption of laptops was very […]

Filed Under: demographics Tagged With: family, IBM

The internet’s downsides: tell us your stories

September 4, 2012 By Susannah Fox 17 Comments

Worried man talking on a cellphone

This is a request for help finding people who have had bad experiences with online health resources. Let me first say that the internet is often a positive force in people’s lives. My own organization’s research can paint a rather rosy picture: teens are mostly kind to each other online, technology users have more friends […]

Filed Under: e-patient stories Tagged With: cyberchondria, internet access, Pew Internet

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