Tuesday, August 18, 2015

MedX 2014 : A Year Later


Last year, I had the privilege of attending the Stanford MedX Conference as an e-patient and IDEO Challenge participant. I wrote two posts about that experience here on my blog (MedX - A Place for Conversations  , Design Thinking and Health Care- My MedX IDEO Challenge Experience)

While other e-patients prepare for the MedX Conference this year I started to reflect back on my experience and what impact it has made on my role as an e-patient and cancer advocate.

Connections With Other E-patients
I met Janet Freeman-Daily for the first time at MedX. Janet, a metastatic lung cancer patient, and one of the best lung cancer advocates I know.  After the conference Janet and I continued to interact via Twitter and e-mail. In June, at the ASCO Annual Meeting in Chicago I joined her and a few other lung cancer advocates for dinner. Other ovarian cancer advocates might want to limit their interacts with only other ovarian cancer advocates but I have found that interacting with other cancer advocates from MedX like Janet and  Marie Ennis-O’Connor allows me to be an empathetic well-rounded cancer advocate. It helps to understand the latest treatments for other cancers as the treatments are becoming more mutation based than organ based.

While at MedX I didn’t just develop friendships with other e-patients who were cancer survivors . I learned what is was like to live with rheumatoid arthritis from Annette McKinnon, the importance of patient safety from Meredith Hurston (my roommate), the difficulties patients with prosthesis experience from Joe Riffe and our rights as patients to use and analyze our own data from diabetes e-patient,  Doug Kanter.

Putting It Into Practice
I read two books and a number of articles on design thinking in preparation to the MedX IDEO challenge. (Thanks Dennis Boyle.) But actually putting that type of thinking into practice at the conference was invaluable. I loved working in a team to come up with a solution to my problem: How Might We help cancer survivors understand what to expect after treatment ends?

To this day I find myself putting design thinking into practice as the co-moderator of the #gyncsm community / chat. I have even used it when discussing problems and their solutions in the 55 + community I belong to. When I read health articles online I wonder if the authors asked the patients/survivors what information would be important to them. I actually asked a question along those lines at an ASCO Annual Meeting session on integrating survivorship care plan information into electronic medical records. By the way , the researchers said they had not asked the patients what information was important to them. I suggested they may want to ask them in future studies.

I hope that all the e-patients who attend this year’s Med X conference will not only share their stories with others but will be open to the stories of the other conference attendees. Those stories may move you to tears or make you laugh but I assure you they will make an impact on your life. Oh and don't forget to take Zoey for a walk!

Dee
Every Day is a Blessing! 

 

2 comments:

Zhendong Song said...

Thanks for sharing your experience. I am attending this year's MedX and can't wait to meet everyone.

Dee said...

Zhendong

You will have an amazing time learning and networking with others. I look forward to hearing about your experience.

Dee