Thanks to everyone who joined us in person or online today for our presentation at the PCRNV Forum. A special mention must go to James for his great webinar effort! Here is the transcript and analytics for you to enjoy! If you would like to join the Researchers Database, please fill in this Database invitation and send it back to us at Palliverse@gmail.com
Category Archives: social media
Using social media to enhance your clinical and research practice #PCRNV15
Team Palliverse is excited to be presenting at the upcoming Palliative Care Research Network Victoria (PCRNV) Forum on March 24th at 5pm AEDT (2pm AWST; 7pm NZDT). We will be talking about the use of social media in palliative care research and clinical practice. Join us in person, via webinar or on twitter!
#lettertome : A twitter campaign to improve how we share information with patients part 2.
Here is the long awaited second part of Dr Chris Sanderson’s thoughts about #lettertome, where doctors write letters to PATIENTS instead of other doctors……
The idea of #lettertome goes further than sharing a copy of the standard doctors’ letter with the patient. Instead of writing about patients, maybe we could be writing to them. When we reconceptualise what we do in terms of patient-centered care, a letter can have very valuable functions:
- It explicitly addresses the patient’s role in their own care, as part of the team, and helps them to follow up their own part in the treatment plan
- It can restate and confirm the discussion that has been held with the patient, for them to use and refer back to – helping to overcome problems for patients of misunderstanding, mishearing, or simply missing much of what is said because they are overwhelmed
- Likewise, the GP and other clinicians can know exactly what has been communicated to the patient about their situation
- It can affirm the clinician’s care for the patient, and their plans to address the patient’s problems
- It can invite the patient to correct or update information that is being shared about them
- It conveys a fundamental message of respect, of collaboration, and of transparency in communication, and helps the patient to understand how the network of clinicians caring for them are working together in their care – who is doing what, and how they are staying in touch with each other to address the patient’s problems.
Special guest post – Dr Chris Sanderson on #lettertome
Dear readers,
We are honoured to bring you a guest post, in fact two, and indeed we hope more, from the fabulous Dr Chris Sanderson, palliative care physician. I have to say that I was so inspired by this idea, by putting patients at the centre of our communication, where they should be, that I totally stole this idea for my own Change Day pledge.
Below is part one of her description of her pledge for Change Day, #lettertome.
#lettertome : A twitter campaign to improve how we share information with patients.
Social media is such a wonderful space for spreading ideas – and sometimes the simplest ideas may convey a world of significance. Recently on twitter, there was a conversation between various doctors and patient advocates about how we speak to and about our patients, and the subject of doctors’ letters was raised. Thus was born a new hashtag, a pledge for Change Day Australia, and potentially a new way of doing things.
Tell me, which healthcare hashtags should I follow on twitter?
Too easy.
Symplur has come up with this fantastic list of healthcare hashtags.
You can search for areas of interest, eg. “palliative”
http://www.symplur.com/search/%23palliative
(Hey! I am 6th in worldwide palliative influencers!!)
I am off to check some of them out!
Sonia

