Tag: policy

  • How Change is Ushered in Healthcare

    Pre pandemic, it is said that among service industries, change is predictably most difficult in the healthcare profession. There are several reason for this, but because processes in healthcare are already often complex, and sometimes ambiguous, embedding a new culture happen at a very slow pace. Take the pre pandemic research to standards of care policy change and implementation. It usually takes a decade for new promising research result to become standards of care in clinical medicine. This is even longer in the field of surgery.

    Interestingly, it took us a pandemic to change some of our long held beliefs and practices. Vaccine development and approval for public use for example, took a lightning speed compared to pre pandemic process development and implementation. The use of telemedicine as an adjunct to clinical care also took a “boost” during the pandemic. There’s a saying that necessity is the mother of all inventions, but I guess we cannot wait for another pandemic like scenario to usher change in healthcare. Thus, whatever ushered the lightning speed changes to the healthcare industry during this pandemic, is worth reflecting and replicating. This will be the topic of our tweet chat this Saturday Feb 25, 2023 9:00PM Manila time.

    [su_box title=”Ushering change in the healthcare industry”]
    [su_list icon=”icon: hand-o-right”]

    • T1. What ushered the rapid behaviour changes observed among healthcare professionals during the pandemic?
    • T2. What ushered the rapid process change observed in the healthcare industry during the pandemic?
    • T3. What leadership or management culture that ushered the rapid behavior and process change in the healthcare industry? [/su_list] [/su_box]

      To join the tweet chat, just introduce yourself, answer the above guide questions on prompt and append the hashtag #HealthXPh” to your tweets. See you!

      Image by wavebreakmedia_micro on Freepik

  • Social Media Policy in Healthcare Institutions: A must or too much to ask?

    Since its founding two years ago, #HealthXPh  encourages healthcare professionals to take advantage of social media in improving  healthcare delivery systems in the Philippines. In 2015, #Healthxph rolled out its Medical Professionalism and Healthcare Social Media Manifesto encouraging healthcare professionals to ethically engage the public on social media.  In last year’s Healthcare Social Media Summit we presented how social media changes the healthcare landscape  in the Philippines, vis a vis healthcare research, health education professions, healthcare ethics, and healthcare policy making.

    In 2016, #HealthXPh aims to gain more traction on institutionalising healthcare social media policy. As stated before #HealthXph is neither a healthcare social media policy making nor a social media police-ing body. We however saw the need for healthcare social media policies in healthcare institutions to take advantage of social media’s potential and discourage its misuse.

    There are many obstacles to institutionalising social media policy in health.  The lack of HIPAA like laws in the Philippines is foremost among these obstacles. This does not dampen our advocacy however. In this edition of tweet chat #HealthXPh wants to identify these obstacles and crowdsource solution to these problems.

    Join us this Saturday January 16, 2016 9PM Manila time as we discuss institutionalising healthcare social media policies via #healthXPh tweet chat.

    • T1: Do you have a healthcare social media policy in your healthcare institution?
    • T2: What do you think are the obstacles to institutionalising healthcare social media policy in healthcare?
    • T3: Suggest a practical solution to coming up with healthcare social media policy in your institution.

    Help #HealthXPh crowdsource a strategy to institutionalising healthcare social media policy! Join us this Saturday Jan 16, 2016 9PM Manila time.

    (Header image credit to this article by Allen Quinn “5 Reasons why your company needs a social media policy” . https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/5-things-include-your-social-media-policy-allen-quinn )