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August 27, 2008

A Ubiquitously Useful App

Scobleizer recommends a lot of apps. Recently, Robert's had somewhat of an epiphany on why he started blogging and what PR really means to him. I love his passionates v. non-passionates debate. He drives home some really great points about the influence of early adopters on advancing new technology.

His most recent recommendation, a Firefox add-on called Ubiquity, is universally useful and deserves mention. Check out the video below.


Ubiquity for Firefox from Aza Raskin on Vimeo.

August 24, 2008

Weekend Quotes

The report's authors "estimate that in order to provide services to these medically disenfranchised Americans, as well as current patients, health centers will need up to 60,000 more primary-care professionals, and up to 44,500 additional nurses."


-National Association of Community Health Centers (article link)

If pure thought is a body, it is our emotions that supply the heart that can really bring it to life. Our thoughts and feelings exist in relation to one another, and they form a feedback loop through which they communicate and empower each other.


-Daily Om: Undistracted Energy

“Redefining smoking not as a behavioral habit but as a pharmacological addiction may sound like good public policy, but it works against the public health when it reaches people that it is impossible to quit. Indeed, instead of having the intended effect of steering potential smokers – that is, children – away from cigarettes, demonizing cigarettes via nicotine reinforced smokers’ feelings of pharmacological enslavement and undermined their will to quit.


The tobacco habit should be characterized as an habituation rather than an addiction…”


-Smoking, A Behavioral Analysis, published in 1971

August 22, 2008

Dog Training Ourselves

Ian Dunbar gets dogs, but he also gets human behavior. I'll timestamp the latter first just because it's so on about relationship skills and interaction skills.

12:00: Training ourselves to be better at relationships
7:35: Insights on punishment without force
4:00: Really simple dog training techniques


August 20, 2008

Reminding Patients To Take Their Medication

Patients being non-compliant with taking their medication negates the value of going to the doctor, creates confusion in setting up treatment plans and in the case of antibiotics teaches the exact bacteria you're trying to kill how to fight back (MRSA).

Luckily, next generation devices such as Zuri aim to help remind patients to take their medication and also provide an electronic record of time and dosage to the doctor. Real-time interfacing with your medical provider is the only way to monitor medication activity successfully.

Here's more from the WSJ.
...the Zuri, an iPod-sized device that sends patients reminders to take their medications and records their compliance, which users and, if they choose, their doctors can track through a companion Web page.

Intel's care-management tool, called Health Guide, combines an in-home patient device with an online interface that doctors can use to monitor and remotely manage care. The in-home patient device collects readings from specific models of wired and wireless medical devices, such as blood-pressure monitors and glucose meters. It then displays the data for the patient on a touch screen and sends the readings to a secure host server, where health-care professionals can review the information and provide feedback via video conferencing and email.

Meanwhile, Microsoft is working with home-health and fitness-device makers to integrate vital-signs data into HealthVault, an online service the software company recently launched that allows consumers to store, manage and selectively share medical data.

Uplifting, Thought-Provoking Daily Inspiration

Daily OM is a great service. Sign up.

August 20, 2008

Being Clear About Desires
Getting What We Want

The best way to get what we want from life is to first know what we want. If we haven’t taken the time to really understand and identify what would truly make us happy, we won’t be able to ask for it from those around us or from the universe. We may not even be able to recognize it once it arrives. Once we are clear about what we want, we can communicate it to those around us. When we can be honest about who we are and what we want, there is no need to demand, be rude or aggressive, or manipulate others that are involved in helping us get what we want. Instead, we know that we are transmitting a signal on the right frequency to bring all that we desire into our experience.

As the world evolves, humanity is learning to work from the heart. We may have been taught that the way to get what we want is to follow certain rules, play particular games, or even engage in acts that use less than our highest integrity. The only rules we need to apply are those of intention and connection. In terms of energy, we can see that it takes a lot of energy to keep up a false front or act in a way that is counter to our true nature, but much less energy is expended when we can just be and enjoy connections that energize us in return. Then our energy can be directed toward living the life we want right now.

Society has certain expectations of behavior and the roles each of us should play, but as spiritual beings we are not bound by these superficial structures unless we choose to accept them. Instead, we can listen to our hearts and follow what we know to be true and meaningful for us. In doing so, we will find others who have chosen the same path. It can be easy to get caught up in following goals that appear to be what we want, but when we pursue the underlying value, we are certain to stay on our right path and continue to feed our soul.

August 18, 2008

The Secret To Happiness

8:00: What's bad about having too many choices
15:06: The Secret to Happiness

The whole thing's worth watching.


August 4, 2008

Hellooooo Health!

Jay Parkinson to me is the definition of a brazen careerist. Health care is a very conservative sector that's eons behind in technology, rife with political machinations and just filled with complexity on all ends. Dr. Parkinson has single-handedly taken on the industry and changed the paradigm from health care to patient care in less than a year. There's a lot of history behind this, and rather than rehash it in prose, I'll hyperlink to milestones that have led to the launch of Hello Health, Jay's company. Safe to say, this model of care delivery is not going anywhere and may spark a revolution in the years to come.
  • Original Website & Philosophy - In a nutshell, doctors making house calls like the old days with an iPhone packing in the patient records instead of a briefcase.
  • The Video Brief - Think medical Facebook. Why not just add your doctor as a "friend" on a privatized network and message him with a problem?
Bottomline: While most of us are used to email, IM, Facebook, iPhone, Google and overall internet-based communication, health care has only just turned on the computer. Jay Parkinson has skipped decades by providing patients real-time access to primary care services. The progress is exponential considering the industry context. The start-up's in Brooklyn, but at this rate Hello Health might be in your neighborhood sooner than you think.