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FCC Workshop: Broadband Consumer Context

September 9th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in Government, Technology

FCC.gov Broadband.gov beta

From the official  FCC event website:

Broadband internet access presents consumers with a range of challenges and opportunities as the internet becomes a focal point for commercial transactions, social networking, and a host of activities pertaining to information gathering and exchange. E-commerce can save consumers time and money as they search out the best bargains from home. Online health care information can give users the wherewithal to ask better questions of their health care providers or seek support and advice from others in the face of a health care problem.

These activities typically involve the sharing of information – financial and personal – with institutions and individuals that make online access worthwhile. This may raise concerns among some consumers about the real or perceived risks that their information may wind up in the wrong hands.

This workshop will examine the broader context of the consumer experience from the perspective of the benefits it confers to consumers, the risks that may be associated with the benefits, and the obligations broadband connectivity may impose on consumers and institutions in an environment of pervasive data sharing and availability.

Workshop/Webinar Information:

Date: Wednesday, 9/9/09
Time: 1:30 pm
Location: Room TW-C305 (Commission Meeting Room)
Federal Communications Commission
445 12th Street SW
Washington, DC 20554
Directions
Coordinator:
Rachel Kazan
Phone: (202) 418-0651

Download MS Word file Agenda and Participant Bios

Topics (Preliminary):

The following are some of the preliminary topics that will be covered at this workshop. If you would like to discuss any other topics, please send us your suggestions.

  • What are the nature and scope of consumer benefits to e-commerce, online comparison shopping, and other activities that may confer informational benefits to people in their interactions with government, health care providers, and other institutions? What, for instance, are the efficiency gains from the internet’s capacity to help people organize activities in their communities (e.g., with respect to sports leagues, church activities, and volunteer organizations)?
  • To what extent is an individual’s personal information at risk in the course of everyday online activities, whether they are associated with commerce, communication, or collaboration? Are there other online safety considerations?
  • As more applications and personal data migrate to “cloud computing” platform, what are the policy challenges pertaining to security of data on such platforms, as well as ownership and control of users’ data?
  • Among consumers, industry, government, and civil society institutions, what is the proper locus of responsibility for addressing these policy challenges?

Agenda

1:30 pm Workshop Introduction, John Horrigan, Consumer Research Director, Omnibus Broadband Initiative, Moderator

1:40 pm Panel 1- Evolving Technology: New Challenges for Consumers

Michael R. Nelson, Visiting Professor, Communication, Culture and Technology, Georgetown University

Sascha Meinrath, Director – Open Technology Initiative, New America Foundation

Joel Kelsey, Policy Analyst, Consumers Union

Ari Schwartz, Vice President and Chief Operating Officer, Center for Democracy and Technology

Debra Berlyn, President, Consumer Policy Solutions

2:05 pm Panelist Discussion and Responses to Questions
2:50 pm Break
3:00 pm Panel 2 – Meeting New Challenges: Tools & Techniques
3:05 pm Panelists

Adam Thierer, Director, Center for Digital Media Freedom and Senior Fellow, Progress and Freedom Foundation

Alan Simpson, Director of Policy, Common Sense Media

Burke Culligan, Senior Director – Product Management, Yahoo!, Inc.

Michael W. McKeehan, Executive Director – Internet and Technology Policy, Verizon

Timothy Sparapani, Director, Public Policy, Facebook

3:30 pm Panelist Discussion and Responses to Questions

4:15 pm Closing Statements, Moderator

4:30 pm Adjournment

Can’t make a trip to DC? Attend the workshop online!

You’ll need to register to attend the webinar. You’ll also need to set up the required webinar software New Window prior to the event. Also check New Window to make sure that you have the appropriate players needed to playback the UCF (Universal Communications Format) rich media files. The sooner your computer is properly set up, the sooner you can join the event! If you have problems joining a meeting or viewing the webinar, please contact the events administrator.

Tweet your questions! External Website
Submit questions to panelists from Twitter @fccdotgov. Use hashtag #BBwkshp to have your question asked during the workshop.

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Meet America’s Most Innovative Hospitals

May 10th, 2007 | No Comments | Posted in Healthcare

Fierce Healthcare logo - Anne Zieger

Fierce Healthcare announces its 2007 Hospital Innovators Awardees. Friend and client healthcare CEO and pioneering blogger Nick Jacobs runs one of the top five. (It’s no coincidence Nick is presently writing a new book entitled Taking the Hell Out of Healthcare.)

Just announced by Anne Zieger and her team at prestigious industry analysts at FierceHealthcare.com:

“We are pleased to announce the release of our first-annual Hospital Innovators Awards —honoring U.S. acute care hospitals that have taken a leadership role on critical industry issues… These awards honor some of the most innovative acute care hospitals that are stepping outside of ‘business as usual’ and getting special things done. Some are strikingly original, and others are just doing a great job of solving common industry problems.”

1. Memorial Hospital-South Bend 6. Sisters of Mercy
2. Licking Memorial Hospital 7. St. Joseph’s Hospital
3. University of Pittsburgh
Medical Center
8. Griffin Hospital
4. Winona Health 9. Cedars-Sinai Medical Center
5. Windber Medical Center 10. Morton Plant Mease Health Care


Number five on Fierce’s top ten list,
Windber Medical Center, is managed by none other than President and CEO F. Nicholas (Nick) Jacobs, freshly returned from the healthcare blogging symposium at Consumer Health World in Las Vegas, produced by Transmarx.

Here are some excerpts from FierceHealthcare’s 2007 award page recognizing Windber Medical Center as one of the top five most innovative hospitals in America.

What they’re doing: Despite its rural location and small scale, there are some things going on at Windber Medical Center that sit on the cutting edge. Windber’s system…is tying together the work being done by its Windber Research Institute with day-to-day clinical practice. This concept is mostly at the idea stage in most institutions, including high-profile, big-bucks academic medical centers, but Windber is making it happen.”

“Under this concept, known as The Model, patient care teams now include not only physicians and nurses, but also a researcher from the Institute whose job it is to apply what they’re learning in the lab. Researchers draw in part on knowledge gained from the Institute’s 40,000-donor tissue bank, which includes attributes such as gender, age, ethnicity and medical history, to predict what patients may need given the experience of similar donors. It’s a noteworthy strategy–especially for a small facility out in the boonies.”

“What’s more, Windber has jumped into the Planetree model with both feet… As CEO Nick Jacobs puts it, the Planetree philosophy offers patients ‘the best of a spa, best of a hotel and best of a hospital,’ complete with integrative health features such as massage, aroma therapy and Reiki, and comfort options like private kitchens, popcorn and bread making machines for patient’s families, double beds in OB, a greenhouse, healing gardens and decorative fountains. On the less touchy-feely side, this model also gives patients complete access to charts during their stay, giving them chance to ask questions as they see fit. While Planetree has its detractors, it’s hard [not] to argue that Windber is making a great go of it.”

This is actually the second time Windber has received accolades for innovation within the last month. FierceHealthcare’s award comes on the heels of the April 17, 2007 issue of Inside Healthcare Computing, covered in my April 24th post over on Trusted.MD in which Nick, others and myself evangelized for the business value of blogging and other web-based social media for healthcare organizations.

You can read excerpts from Inside Healthcare Computing, or download the complete article (as an Adobe Acrobat/Reader document) here.

So, congratulations to Nick and everyone whose creativity, hard work and innovation earned them Fierce Healthcare’s recognition for clinical excellence.

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