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20 hospitals with inspiring social media strategies | Articles | Home - 0 views

  • 1. Mayo Clinic The Mayo Clinic has long been an online resource for medical information, with a website that offers advice and expertise from more than 3,300 medical professionals for free, so it’s not at all surprising that the medical group has been successful in social media
  • Doctors were able to share and connect with readers and patients through a first-hand account of relief efforts performed after the 2010 Haiti earthquake.
  • Massachusetts General Hospital recognizes this, and did something amazing when researchers from the Emergency Department worked together to create an iPhone app designed to help users find the closest emergency room to their area anywhere in the U.S. The app was promoted using hospital social media outlets, creating a YouTube video that bloggers could embed in their stories, also providing for opportunities to tweet the video and share it on Facebook. With the help of social media, the hospital’s app was able to stand out in the sea of apps available for the iPhone.
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  • During the Ft. Hood shooting crisis, one of the hospitals treating victims, Scott & White, took it upon themselves to share updates with the community. Employee Steven Widman offered updates on emergency room access, hospital operation status, and more, also updating with Red Cross news and sharing communications with reporters. The crisis pushed Scott & White’s communications to the forefront of social media, increasing their Twitter followers by 78 percent in only three days, turning Scott & White Healthcare into a Twitter "trending topic," and ranking the hospital’s YouTube channel among the most viewed non-profit channels during the crisis. Both people who were affected and those who were tuned in from afar were able to get real-time updates, thanks to the efforts of Widman and the ability of social media to share information.
  • Nebraska Medical Center has created an incredible YouTube presence, one so successful, that as 360 Digital Influence points out, they’ve had an increase in requests for one surgery in particular. It’s all thanks to a patient who shared her cancer experience on YouTube, which led to so many requests for the surgery she had to treat her rare carcinoid cancer that NMC had to open a monthly clinic for the condition. The medical center encourages patients to share their experience, and even makes use of QR codes to share videos of physicians introducing themselves to potential patients.
  • Connecting with patients and community members is great, but what if you could use social media to do something really amazing, like raise more than $1 million for a new children’s hospital? UCSF did just that, taking on a social media fundraising contest named Challenge for the Children. About 165,000 people blew past the hospital’s initial $100,000 fundraising goal thanks to social media channels including Facebook and Twitter. Much of the campaign’s success ($805,554 worth) was thanks to the Facebook game FarmVille, which allowed players to purchase virtual candy cane seeds that sent 100 percent of the profits to the challenge. This amazingly successful challenge paved the way for a new children’s hospital in Mission Bay, set for completion in 2014, and the top two teams will be honored with the naming of a dedicated space in the hospital.
  • t’s so important to be relevant to the topic at hand in social media, and getting off course can turn off would-be fans. But WakeMed Health & Hospitals in Raleigh, North Carolina made a smart move in April 2011, sharing a time-lapse video shot from the hospital’s helipad that showed a tornado as it passed through the area. Although the tornado is a non-medical story not directly related to the hospital’s mission, hospitals are a vital part of any community, and in sharing this video, WakeMed further cemented itself as a valuable resource for the Raleigh area. Med City News praised WakeMed for the video, pointing it out as one of the top blog entries for the medical group. As WakeMed spokeswoman Heather Monackey shares, they’ve found success in social media because they "just pay attention to what’s going on."
  • Hospitals are using social media to connect internally, in addition to community building. At Texas Health Resources, social media tools make it possible for physicians and other health professionals to engage with each other and take advantage of useful tools. Using social media, Texas Health Resources promotes the adoption of electronic health records, and integrates the use of the private microblogging site Yammer to share internal messages, how-to videos, and more. Project managers and physicians use social media tools like Yammer to come together, collaborate, and communicate effectively over a large hospital system.
  • ealth care social media isn’t just about attracting patients and building community, at least not for Geisinger Health System in Danville, Pennsylvania. The health system typically turned to ads in medical journals and direct mail to recruit gastroenterologists, but when they had trouble getting enough responses, associate vice president of marketing Cathy Connolley turned to social media to recruit their physicians. With the help of a recruitment marketing firm, Geisinger created a social media physician recruitment campaign, creating a convenient and cost-effective way to communicate with physicians, and an easy way to direct gastroenterologists to their Facebook page. As Connolley reports, "that tactic outpaced our direct mail approach and our email blasts."
  • Live-tweeting brain surgery just sounds like crazy talk, but Henry Ford Hospital near Detroit made it work. While performing surgery on a 47-year-old man, doctors discussed the procedure with more than 1,900 people, and even uploaded video of the surgery to YouTube. Things seem to go to the next level when the answer to Twitter’s "What are you doing?" question is brain surgery. The hospital earned praise and attention from ABC News, and showed off just how well they can make use of social media. In addition to Twitter brain surgeries, Henry Ford Hospital makes use of news feeds, Flickr, and blogging to reach patients and the general community.
  • Scripps makes it a point to connect with patients and customers through the use of social media. In an interview with Found In Cache, Scripps director of web technology Marc Needham shared that the hospital typically spends its social media time on customer service. In fact, Scripps developed a new position of Electronic Customer Service Representative, specifically created to reach out to patients through social media and respond to online reviews. Needham pointed out that Scripps believes it’s important to have a good handle on their online brand perception, and left unchecked, "unaddressed complaints fester and lead to online reputation rot." Scripps has found success in this pursuit, but Needham says they haven’t quite defined their social media approach just yet, and they’re still experimenting with a variety of different sites, including Wikipedia, YouTube, Flickr, Facebook, and LinkedIn. Scripps tends to use different sites for different purposes, like Facebook for recruitment and LinkedIn for employee connections.
  • hildren’s Hospital Boston has a wildly popular Facebook page. A Facebook page alone isn’t quite enough to be truly impressive these days, but Children’s Hospital Boston really stands out, not just for its half a million plus fans, but really for its top-notch content. Their landing page has information people really want to read, and an encouraging atmosphere that gets patients and fans to open up and share their stories. This high level of engagement is truly inspiring, and offers a great lesson for any Facebook Page owner. Through photos of the week, Children’s Hospital Boston highlights families and patients, who in turn spread the word to their friends and family on Facebook, bringing fans and patients to the Facebook Page to interact. But, as Ignite Social Media points out, Children’s Hospital Boston does so much more than Facebook, effectively managing a Twitter feed and YouTube video collection as well.
  • arasota Memorial Hospital understands the value to building better relationships through social media. In an interview with The Side Note, the hospital’s market research manager Shawn Halls shared how it came to begin using social media as an important tool. After growth and more than three years of use, Sarasota Memorial now sees Twitter and other sites as an important part of their communications strategy, using social media as a way for the community to directly communicate with the hospital. The hospital encourages patients to direct message their Twitter account, and has even been able to connect patient family members with resources like local florists through the site. Like other hospitals, Sarasota Memorial also has plans to share surgery via Twitter, specifically a brain mapping procedure where the patient is awake.
  • Social media is great for spreading news, but it’s also a useful tool for correcting misinformation as well. The Greater Baltimore Medical Center knows that fact all too well, as in August 2010, a Baltimore TV station incorrectly reported that the hospital had been invaded by an armed robber. GBMC media relations manager Michael Schwartzberg was able to act quickly to correct the mistake, sending out a swift collection of tweets that set the story straight for the public and concerned citizens. With active social media accounts already in place, the foundation for sharing information was set and easy to take advantage of, something that the hospital utilizes frequently. Schwartzberg reports that in addition to media relations and customer service, GBMC uses social media as a valuable way to share crisis communication, much like their fake armed robber, H1N1 updates, and if need be, disaster reporting.
  • Just like GBMC, Inova Health found value in Twitter’s ability to set incorrect information straight. Inova uses a security system designed to prevent the theft of babies from maternity wards, and as hospital personnel ran a test of the system, a visitor heard it and mistakenly believed that there was a lost baby. That same visitor then tweeted about the non-incident. Director of digital communications and marketing Chris Boyer had wisely set up social media monitoring services, and quickly spotted the tweet within just minutes of posting. After calling to confirm that there was not actually a problem, Boyer was able to immediately respond on Twitter and share the hard facts of the story, helping to preserve the hospital’s reputation before things got really crazy. Inova Health’s story shows just how important it is to use tools that can help you monitor and stay on top of your social media presence.
  • Living organ donation is an amazing gift and process, and Children’s Medical Center was able to share a special family’s story through Twitter. As a Texas firefighter donated his kidney to his three-year-old son, the Twitterverse was able to follow along with their successful story from start to finish, shared by none other than the mom and wife. With nearly 85,000 people on the waiting list for a kidney, Children’s Medical Center media relations manager Jessica Newell hopes that "twittering from this surgery will help raise awareness for organ donation, as well as living organ donation."
  • Twitter and social media in general can be a scary thing for hospitals, opening up issues of liability and uncomfortable situations. But at least at the University at Buffalo School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, doctors and professors recognize Twitter as an incredibly valuable tool for learning and training. Dr. Philip L. Glick shares his insight: "[A] lot of the training consists of passing on information, lessons learned, and wisdom to the next generation. Twitter allows us to dramatically scale up our ability to do this. When I post something on Twitter, all the pediatric surgeons, trainees and colleagues in the country and the world can see it instantly." In addition to small updates, University at Buffalo uses social media to share audio and video of procedures, breaking them down into small pieces that offer opportunities for sharing and teaching. 18. St. Luke’s Cedar Rapids
  • Anxious groups of families and friends sit in hospital waiting rooms across the country, hoping to hear updates and news that their loved one is doing well. Some will find out about things as they go along, some simply when procedures are over. The level of information shared largely depends on the capacity and availability of the team of medical professionals at work. With Twitter, the time and energy necessary to share updates with loved ones is significantly decreased, and small, frequent updates can be shared in just moments, creating an opportunity for hospitals to better inform worried waiting rooms as things go along. At St. Luke’s Cedar Rapids, one family was able to enjoy this incredible level of customer service, as their 70-year-old mother Monna Cleary underwent a hysterectomy and uterine prolapse surgery. Cleary had given her OK for the hospital to share a play-by-play of her operation, and hospital spokeswoman Sarah Corizzo shared more than 300 tweets, allowing the family to follow along, and informing the general public. Corizzo answered questions, and fascinated nearly 700 people who followed along with the surgery. Hospital spokeswoman Laura Rainey pointed out that live-tweeting is a "more gentle" way to inform patients and consumers, allowing them to follow what’s going on without shocking visuals. Cleary’s son Joe and his siblings appreciated the opportunity, pointing out that "it made the time go by," and they enjoyed having real-time information and staying informed while in the waiting room.
  • haring information during a crisis is vital, even when you don’t have a lot of time or resources to do it. So when more than 50 people had to go to hospitals for treatment following a chemical fume exposure at a trash disposal station, Southcoast Hospital turned its Twitter account into a "crisis communication portal," sharing status updates for more than a week. Updates included status on admitted, discharged, and treated patients during the spill, and helpful information and links that kept the public and concerned loved ones constantly updated during the situation.
  • Hospitals are full of stories that the community is interested in, with people overcoming great odds and going on to live healthier lives. At Barnes-Jewish Hospital, a 23-year-old heart transplant patient Megan Moss attracted lots of local interest, thanks to updates from the Barnes-Jewish Hospital blog, Touching Base. Additionally, Megan’s dad shared constant updates through his own blog. Moss’s story attracted so much attention, that one weekend, she got 75 emails through the hospital’s website with well wishes from friends, family, and strangers alike. Through numerous updates and even a video interview with the hospital’s director of heart transplant, both Moss and Barnes-Jewish got much deserved attention within the community.
hamelinclara

Google Glass: How it works, what it could mean for health care | Articles | Main - 0 views

  • On the Blue Sky blog, Julie Moore writes of watching #IfIHadGlass tweets and seeing suggestions such as real-time medical histories and apps for the deaf. Kyle Samani , an inpatient deployment manager, says Google Glass “presents enormous opportunities for one-way messaging and confidential communication in healthcare.” A Pharma Forward blog post suggests that Emergency Medical Technicians wearing Google Glass could send live video feeds to emergency room doctors to help in care while transporting patients.
hamelinclara

'OK Glass, Save A Life.' The Application Of Google Glass In Sudden Cardiac Death - Forbes - 0 views

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    "Google GOOG -0.32% Glass has made its way into healthcare.  Its use in the operating room and in medical education has been profiled here.  Yet the magic of Glass will be found in the applications that can make this "technology" into real-world solutions for health and medicine.  It's a bit like the smart phone and how its realization is a function of the countless apps that bring the device to life. Inside The Operating Room With Google Glass John Nosta Contributor Christian Assad, MD has taken the next step with Glass and developing a practical app that can turn Glass into a real life-saver. He recently profiles this application on his blog and I believe it's an important turn of events that showcase just how technology can be applied to medicine and public health issues.  Here's how it presents the concept in his blog-Google Glass and augmented CPR:"
hamelinclara

Is Pinterest the Risk-Free Social Channel for Pharma? - 0 views

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    "I recently came across a blog post headlining Pinterest as the "safest place" for medical marketers to start with social media. All too aware that there are many Pharma marketers out there still a little shy of social, it was a must read. Launched just three years ago, Pinterest has enjoyed phenomenal expansion of its user base, posting growth of 1,000 percent in 2012. As of June 2013 it had more than 48 million users, generating 2.5 billion page views a month. With a demographic skewed heavily towards 25 to 34 year-old women, half of them with children, the potential for marketers seems real. If you're not sure exactly what Pinterest is, imagine a huge virtual pinboard where users display pictures they like. Users can pin up their own images, but mostly they pin images from other people's websites or re-pin images previously posted on Pinterest - 80 percent of the images on Pinterest have been re-pinned, or shared, within the network. It's this re-pinning that makes Pinterest interesting for brands - the opportunity to harness the viral power of social sharing is enormous. In a recent adoption rates study, social media analytics firm Simply Measured reported that 69 percent of the Interbrand top 100 brands are on Pinterest."
hamelinclara

MARCHÉ PHARMA: Vers une offre de service autour du médicament - IMS Health | ... - 0 views

  • MARCHÉ PHARMA: Vers une offre de service autour du médicament – IMS Health Publié le 17/06/2011 Sélectionner une langue​▼ Nouveaux marché émergents et stabilité en Europe, nouveaux segments de produits et surtout nouvelles exigences de l'ensemble des acteurs du système de santé, des Autorités sanitaires au patients en incluant aujourd'hui l'ensemble des professionnels de santé, le tout dans un contexte économique tendu, ce rapport d'IMS Health souligne, à destination des laboratoires pharmaceutiques, la nécessité d'adapter, en permanence, leurs stratégies marketing. On retiendra en particulier la notion de progrès médical dans l'innovation et de service autour du médicament qui doit désormais être intégrée dans l'offre pharmaceutique.
  • Des marchés émergents: Avec le tassement des marchés matures, les Etats‐Unis notamment devraient être remplacés par la Chine, prochain principal contributeur à la croissance mondiale avec le Brésil, la Russie, l'Inde, l'Asie du Sud‐Est et l'Amérique Latine.
  • Des pathologies émergentes: Cette étude publiée par IMS Health souligne, pour l'Europe, l'augmentation du segment des médicaments de spécialistes au dépens du segment des médicaments de généralistes.  Alzheimer, épilepsie,  Parkinson,  sclérose en plaques, ces grandes pathologies en neurologie devraient faire l'essentiel de la croissance du marché (7 % pour les « spécialistes », contre 5 % pour les « généralistes).
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  • En France, pas de croissance: « Le marché français reflète la tendance observée à l'international sur les marchés matures”, relève le rapport. La croissance est quasi nulle en 2010 et le sera probablement en 2011. Le marché hospitalier qui affichait une croissance à deux chiffres au début des années 2000, 6 % en 2009, ne progresse que de 2 % en 2010. Le marché des génériques qui représente 14 % en valeur, doit digérer deux nouvelles molécules (atorvastatine, esoméprazole) non encore génériquées qui soutiendront son dynamisme qui contribue à la stabilité générale en valeur du marché français. Le marché de « l'automédication » (OTC) est lui qualifié d'atone, avec des prix stables et une demande également stable, liée à la crise économique et à la crise de confiance du médicament certainement.
  • La perspective d'une évaluation post-AMM européenne? L'intégration européenne de l'évaluation du médicament post‐AMM pourrait être envisagée même si la France, l'Allemagne et le Royaume‐Uni militent plutôt en faveur du statu quo et d'une autonomie de décision, évoque l'économiste Claude Le Pen. Dans ce cas, l'approche serait économique avant d'être clinique ou médicale
hamelinclara

Le scandale Stapel, ou comment un homme seul a dupé le système scientifique |... - 0 views

  • A lui seul, ce chercheur a durablement écorné l'image de toute une discipline, la psychologie sociale, et mis en lumière quelques failles du système scientifique.
  • d'août 2011, à l'université de Tilburg, où Diederik Stapel enseignait : trois jeunes chercheurs ont alors fait état de leur suspicion pour les données de ses expériences, tant celles qui figuraient dans les études qu'ils publiait que celles qu'il fournissait à ses étudiants.
  • Pour être juste, le rapport précise tout de même que quelques personnes s'étaient posé des questions. Non sans prendre des risques pour leur carrière, trois jeunes chercheurs avaient évoqué, auprès de l'université de Tilburg, des irrégularités dans les jeux de données fournis par Diederik Stapel. De même, deux enseignants s'étaient étonnés de ses chiffres trop bons pour être honnêtes. Mais, comme c'est souvent le cas avec les lanceurs d'alerte et comme on l'a aussi constaté dans la récente affaire Annie Dookhan qui a secoué la police scientifique américaine, personne n'a tenu compte de ces mises en garde précoces...
hamelinclara

Le blog de l'export UBIFRANCE : pour le développement international des TPE-PME - 0 views

  • Sanofi Aventis Turquie a signé un protocole de partenariat avec l’Université Egé pour la création d’un centre de R&D pour la création de nouveaux médicaments
hamelinclara

Nurep Blog - 0 views

  • Scheduling cases can be challenging as cases may occur earlier/later than planned. Trauma cases are rarely ever planned. “The entire OR staff is ready to go and we are waiting for the rep to arrive.”
  •  Physicians abandon complicated devices that fail to offer guaranteed support. “We stopped using the device. We are tired of needing an in-person rep for every question or issue that arises.
  • ) Physicians that have to switch a device in the OR can’t obtain the support they need. “I’d consider switching my business to a device that offers guaranteed real-time support.”
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  • 5) Phone support takes too long and is insufficient, as the rep cannot see the issue. “Visuals would have solved the issue in secs; on the phone for 30min w/ patient in shock. We wasted two $35K devices” Potential Result: Delay in care.
hamelinclara

50 supports d'informations sur les pathologies e... - MindMeister Mind Map - 0 views

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    "50 supports d'informations sur les pathologies et la santé, proposés par l'industrie pharmaceutiqueAbbott parlons spso vous n'êtes pas seul freestyle diabète AbbVie bébépréma Astellas dessolutionspourmavessieAsthme & AllergiesAstraZeneca asthmaclic Migrain-eBaxter renalinfoBayer avcvitele15Biogen la sep bougeBoehringer Ingelheim au cœur de l'AVC BpcoChiesi web documentaire asthmeGenzyme Hypercholestérolémie FamilialeGlaxoSmithKline mon asthmeIpsen Automesure tensionnelleJanssen C Time VIHservices Psoriasis reflux & nutrition Schizophrenia24x7MSD Mon Journal Positif iChemo diaryNovartis sep&vous dmla monparkinson prochedemalade Génération ProchesNovo Nordisk diabetePfizer douleurnonidentifiee cancer du poumon ALK prevention-tabac aloisPierre Fabre unoeilsurlallergie mon-partenaire-santeRoche voixdespatients la chaine rose Polyarthrite 2.0 (Roche et Chugai)Sanofi impact-malaria passez l'infoStallergènes Alertes pollensUrgo iPollen prevention-escarreBMS Path BSOS hépatites France AVC, Société Française Neuro-vasculaire Association Pour la Lutte Contre le PsoriasisLilly vivresoncoupleGalderma toutsurlacne tout savoir sur la rosacéeLundbeck parkinson-infos alzheimer-infos depression-infosL'auteur : Fabrice Vezin Blog : le monde de la e-santé Page Facebook Scoop.it cv onlineAFAP-NP, CEDR, AFVD, ACS, AFLARCNMR, FFC, FFP, SFTSociété Française d'OphtalmologieADIRSrevue Nutritions & EndocrinologieComité Français de Lutte contre l'HyperTension Artérielle Asthme & Allergies, CNMR CNMR, FFAAIR, AlvéoleAFA, ANGH, CREGG, GETAID, SNFGERNSA, LCSQARNSARNSA, CFOA, Asthme & Allergies Create your own awesome maps Even on the go with our free apps for iPhone, iPad and Android Inscrivez-vous gratuitement Vous avez déjà un compte ? Entrer -+Options de la MapMap actions "
hamelinclara

PharmTech Talk » Pharma's Reputation in Decline - 0 views

  • Respondents indicated several reasons for the overall decline: inappropriate marketing of drugs perceived lack of transparency, especially in reporting results from clinical trials some drug prices are still unaffordable to many patients and payers, giving the general impression that profit comes before patients.
  • Drug development is expensive; far more expensive than many average patients and consumers will ever understand
  •   patient-centredness, patient information, patient safety, useful products, transparency and integrity, so these represent good areas for companies seeking to boost their reputation to scrutinise.
hamelinclara

PharmTech Talk » Social Media and the Pharma Industry - 0 views

  • For the pharmaceutical industry, social media poses concerns that range from release of propriety information to regulatory constraints to patient safety. These concerns have limited the industry’s use of a potential marketing and networking tool. Other industries are using Twitter, Facebook, and other social media outlets to promote products, follow consumer trends, and connect directly with their consumers. Is social media being used effectively at all in the pharmaceutical industry? Are there ways social media can be positively used by industry members to share ideas, connect with industry members, or even promote products? And if there is a fear of regulatory infractions, what can or should FDA and other international regulatory agencies do to promote the use of social media?
hamelinclara

Pharma Marketing Blog: Drop TV Ads, Says John LaMattina, Former Pfizer President of R&D - 0 views

  • The other 3 fixes LaMattina put on a par with dropping TV ads are Transparency of payments to healthcare professionals,  Transparency of clinical trial data, and  Stop the illegal detailing of drugs 
hamelinclara

How Pharma Companies Use Social Media | Business 2 Community - 1 views

  • branded (sponsored and monitored by a specific brand), non-branded (usually support groups, fundraisers or information-based platforms like WebMD), and healthcare professional communities
  • acebook, Twitter and YouTube, as well as blogs (sponsored and non-sponsored)
  • a lot of opportunity for more engagement and creating educational communities onlin
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  • Mayo Clinic did with live tweet chats.
  • to improve business efficiency
hamelinclara

Download Presentation: Unveiling the potential of the CEE market - implications and opp... - 0 views

  • he Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) region is often cited as being one of Europe’s fastest growing economies.  The pharmaceutical sector has grown rapidly over the past decade, and ranks within the top 10 industrial sectors in CEE. Its position has also been strengthened by the recent accessions of many CEE countries to the EU. The CEE pharmaceutical market has attracted many foreign investors in recent years, due to the strong opportunities for growth that exist here
  • great opportunity as well as some challenges
hamelinclara

La Reco 2013 du Think Tank Economie Santé : comment passer du projet à la réa... - 0 views

  • « Vos propositions sont cohérentes et devraient susciter l'unanimité (au moins sur les objectifs) a réagi Patricia Siwek (Haut Conseil de la Santé Publique). Cependant il me semble qu'il manque en préalable de vos travaux un états des lieux   et une évaluation de tous les dispositifs qui ont eu comme objectif (a minima) d'assurer la coordination des soins. Que ce soit les Clic, dont on dit que ce fut un échec, le forfait de 40 euros versé aux médecins, par année et pour chaque patient en ALD (ce qui représente quand même une grosse somme si on considère les plus de 10 millions de personnes en ALD), ou encore le "médecin traitant" mis en place par la réforme de l'assurance maladie de 2004, le DMP, pourtant si indispensable et qui malgré les financements très importants mis en œuvre n'a pas réussi à s'imposer... Aucune de ces mesures n'a rempli son office et aucun diagnostic n'a été réalisé concernant les causes de cet éch
  •  « Ayant participé aux travaux du Pole Finance Innovation sur le thème « Longévité et bien-vieillir » explique Jérôme Sallard ( Octen consulting) « nous étions arrivés à des conclusions tout à fait similaires sur certains points , comme la nécessité d’un point orientation (ou l’assureur pourrait tenir son rang, étant financeur, preneur de risque et apporteur de services) mais aussi la nécessité d’avoir une approche globale qui permette de coordonner l’ensemble des besoins des personnes concernées.
  •  Il y a urgence. Sur les six millions de 75 ans et plus, un tiers est hospitalisé au moins une fois par an et dans un cas sur deux en urgence !  Il s’agit là d’une thématique d’avenir. Chaque année en France il y a 100 000 nouvelles personnes âgées de plus de 75 ans. En 2030 : deux millions de plus soit 8 millions.  Cette Reco est structurante car elle s’attaque à un des défauts majeurs du système de soins français, l’insuffisance de coordination qui le concerne dans son ensemble.
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