Posts Tagged ‘Ind.’

Ind. doctors prescribe technology, social media – Chicago Tribune

Saturday, April 23rd, 2011

INDIANAPOLIS—

Scalpel. Stethoscope. Twitter account?

Modern medicine is no longer just about the expertise and tools of the trade that heal patients. It’s also about the technology — think Internet and social networking — that helps doctors connect with patients.

Increasingly, health-care providers are turning to Facebook, Twitter, text messaging and other forms of social media to market their practice and share health information.

Dr. Wally Zollman, a plastic surgeon for more than three decades, started a professional Facebook page about a year and a half ago to get the word out about his practice.

“You can’t deny that 700 billion minutes a month are spent on Facebook. There’s all this interaction,” he said. “People are looking for someone to ask about, `Who’s your plumber? Who have you had luck with?’ It’s the same thing with surgeons.”

In addition to before-and-after videos, Zollman features specials that he’s offering on the page. He receives many kinds of questions, but he answers personal ones only by phone or email.

Social media such as Facebook can act as powerful marketing tools, said Keith Humes, CEO of Rosemont Media, a search engine marketing company based in San Diego that helps physicians set up an online presence.

Facebook is “the new word-of-mouth referral,” Humes said. “Facebook allows us to take a half-step into the practice and get a feeling for what it is like.”

The American Medical Association published guidelines for the use of social media in November. The policy includes advice such as: Be aware of patient privacy issues and maintain personal-professional boundaries.

Although there’s no way to tally how many physicians have ventured into social media, doctors are embracing Facebook more than Twitter, said Dr. Kevin Pho, an expert on the intersection of health care and social media. Fewer than 10,000 doctors tweet, and many do so for personal use.

Twitter allows short messages, which can be broadcast to all of the followers of that account or can be made private. Comments are limited to 140 characters for each post. Facebook allows sharing of information, including videos and photos. But permission must be given for others to be your “friends” and see your posts.

In the future, more physicians may turn to all these modes of interaction, said Pho, an internist in Nashua, N.H.

“Gone are the days when people are going to look for doctors in the Yellow Pages,” he said. “It’s really to a physician’s advantage to have a digital footprint. . . . I try to convince other doctors (that) you need to get online sooner rather than later.”

Hospital systems also are beginning to recognize the appeal, taking the medium beyond the question of whether doctors should email patients.

Nothing can replace a face-to-face visit, but there’s still ample place for health-care providers online, said Dan Rench, vice president of e-business for Community Health Network.

“It used to be that it was just a way for people to share information that they would typically have in a brochure,” Rench said. “Now it’s become the way that people do business.”

Community has an online chat option, where anyone older than 18 can pose health questions to a registered nurse for a “real-time,” or immediate, answer. Questions range from whether an emergency room visit is necessary after being hit on the head with a soccer ball to inquiries about sexually transmitted diseases.

Since the service started five years ago, there’s been “consistent utilization,” Rench said. In some instances the nurses, who work for a Tennessee company that provides the service for Community, may connect the person to a Community doctor.

The hospital also hosts an “Ask the Expert” interaction with video on its website. This gives visitors a chance to pose a question to a Community expert, as long as the question does not ask for a diagnosis.

View full post on technology – Google News

Biden touts advanced technology vehicles in Ind. – Wall Street Journal

Thursday, January 27th, 2011

Associated Press

GREENFIELD, Ind. — Vice President Joe Biden thanked workers at an electric car battery plant in Indiana Wednesday for doing their part to lift America’s auto industry from its dependence on foreign oil into a high-tech future.

“We have to create whole new industries in the 21st century,” Biden told a crowd of workers, company officials and politicians at Ener1′s car battery plant about 25 miles east of Indianapolis.

Biden’s visit came the day after a State of the Union speech in which President Barack Obama pledged to work to put 1 million advanced technology vehicles such as electric cars and hybrids on America’s roads by 2015.

The White House proposes changing a $7,500 tax incentive currently available for buying an electric car into a rebate that a consumer could receive at the point of sale. The administration also seeks to boost research and development into electric vehicles and create a competitive grant program offering up to $10 million apiece to 30 communities that help foster electric cars.

Biden said one key component was to make charging an electric car easier either at home or at a charging station like a gas station.

Members of Congress are also seeking incentives. Rep. Sander Levin, D-Mich., on Wednesday proposed increasing the number of tax credits for electric vehicles to 500,000 per car manufacturer, up from the current cap of 200,000 vehicles. General Motors has said the cap could hinder future sales of the Chevrolet Volt.

Biden, however, likened such steps to “seed money” and compared it to the way the government fostered the development of railroads in the 1800s. He noted the Recovery Act had included $2.4 billion to help develop advanced auto technology.

“Businesses aren’t always ready to roll the dice,” he said, adding that the U.S. couldn’t afford to stand by and let other nations take the lead in a new industry.

“We have to make this a platform,” he said, “A platform upon which to build a prosperous future.”

Ener1 hopes to build on that platform. The New York-based company has 350 employees working at three plants in the Indianapolis area, with more than 80 working in the Greenfield plant that opened last February. The company used a $118.5 million Recovery Act matching grant in 2009 to expand its production of lithium-ion batteries and has teamed up with Wanxiang Electric Vehicle Group Ltd. to make batteries for the Chinese market.

Ener1 chairman and CEO Charles Gassenheimer called Biden’s remarks “groundshaking” for the fledgling electric car industry as the administration shifts its focus to building demand and infrastructure for electric vehicles.

He said without stimulus funds for investment, Ener1′s plants likely would have been built overseas.

Wendy Howard, a single mother who lost two auto industry jobs to downsizing before making a fresh start at Ener1 eight months ago, introduced Biden and said later, “He’s right along board with us.”

___

Associated Press writer Ken Thomas in Washington contributed to this report.

—Copyright 2011 Associated Press

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