My 2014 Stanford Medicine X Experience (Sep 4-7)

I’m in Palo Alto, CA for four days attending the Stanford Medicine X (#MedX) conference, which focuses on emerging health-care technology and patient-centered medicine. The first day was a pre-conference workshop on Partnering for Health in clinical trials.

I’m having a blast! It’s like a giant TweetUp of patient advocates, healthcare providers, and technology innovators. I’ve met a dozen people that I’d previously only known online. Several of them are patients who are healthcare bloggers and tweetchat moderators like me and have diseases different than mine (diabetes, arthritis, lupus, other cancers, etc.) My roommate is a delightful young pre-med student who happens to love chocolate, and who has had no sense of smell for as long as she can remember (which is fortuitous, considering one of my Xalkori side effects).

Presentations and panels address the evolving nature of healthcare, with a strong emphasis on patient involvement. Some topics:
–How to include the patient voice when designing clinical trials
–How do patients who are not tech savvy (“no smartphone patients”) obtain medical records and learn about their disease?
–Technology to assist those with disabilities
–New apps and devices for improving outcomes (e.g., a device that tracks when bedridden patients need to be turned to avoid bedsores)
–The value of relationships in promoting health
–Training medical students and doctors to incorporate empathy in patient care and ask the patient what is important to them
–Patients self-tracking their health data (e.g., diabetes blood levels and insulin doses)
–Which metrics to use when choosing a doctor, and where to find them, and new ways to gather the info

At least half the people in the audience are interacting with their smartphones, laptops and tablets during the event. I can see how all the online activity is extending the reach of the conference, which is also being streamed live (except when the server crashes from overwhelming demand). It is fascinating to watch the presentations and simultaneously read a very active #MedX Twitter stream that summarizes, critiques and expands on what is being said.

I’ve seen some cool vendor demos also, like 3D printing of medical models and devices:

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My speech is tomorrow (Sunday September 7) at 10:10 AM PDT. Hope you’ll be watching via Medicine X Global Access! If you miss it, it will be posted online eventually.

I fly to Denver Sunday evening for my eight-week scan on Monday. I must admit this conference is a great scanxiety distraction.

Speaking at 2014 Stanford Medicine X

I’m looking forward to attending the 2014 Stanford Medicine X Conference (#MedX on Twitter) as an ePatient Delegate September 5-7 on the campus of Stanford University.  The conference, now in its third year, is the leading patient-centered conference on emerging technology and medicine.

This conference will give me an opportunity to meet and interact with other epatients (engaged and empowered patients who participate in their medical care) as well as innovators who are providing the technologies that enable epatients to learn about their health conditions, track their health status, and share their experiences with others.  I hope this will teach me more about how to use social media to provide lung cancer patients with hope and useful information, raise awareness of our disease, and contribute to research and clinical trials.

I will be speaking on the MedX mainstage about “Making Lung Cancer Visible” on Sunday, September 7.  My speech will be in the Ignite format (5 minutes, 20 slides that automatically advance every 15 seconds), which will be a challenge for my chemobrain!  According to the 2014 MedX schedule,  my talk will be the second in a group of epatient talks that start at 10 AM Pacific Time Sunday 9/7; my talk should start around 10:10 AM.

If you’d like to watch my talk live, please sign up IN ADVANCE (FREE!) for the Stanford Medicine X Global Access Program.  This will allow you to watch all MedX events via livestreaming on the Internet.  If you’re unable to watch it live, my talk will eventually be made available on the MedX YouTube channel — I’ll post the link here when it becomes available.

Edit Sep 17, 2014:
Stanford Medicine X talk posted my talk on YouTube — see it here.