Medicine moves forward everyday while healthcare delivery has long settled for the good enough. The good enough is no longer good enough. It's time we Make Healthcare Awesome.
2. do you feel that? it’s the dissonance of a healthcare experience that has become … decidedly average. mediocre. common. everyday. ordinary. standard. not that bad, not that great — goldilocks and the three bears-like.
3. elements of business, policy, and technology are distancing patients from the healthcare organization’s consciousness … photo credit: flickr user ViaMoi
4. … while patients are trying to get closer by empowering themselves and engaging in their health decisions photo credit: flickr user jerryzz
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6. a call to action: better the healthcare experience and rid healthcare delivery of its consumed mediocrity photo credit: flickr user gstagostinho
7. move from organizationally centered to patient focused photo credits: flickr users HishaamSiddqi, peevee@ds
8. reframe the organization’s decision making through the patient’s perspective to awesomize the healthcare experience photo credit: flickr user SimplyShutterbug
9. while lobby fountains, free valet parking, and hotel-like hospital rooms are nice … photo credits: flickr users Geek2Nurse, tjdewey, DiscoverDuPage
10. healthcare is a relationship “The vast majority of the feelings you experience as they pertain to your relational partner (used broadly) are a direct outcome of the communication interactions that occur between the two of you. A relationship is communication.” – Ryan Goei photo credit: flickr user bitzi
11. photo credit: flickr user KaiChanVong “You cannot not communicate. Every behaviour is a kind of communication. Because behaviour does not have a counterpart (there is no anti-behaviour), it is not possible not to communicate.” –Paul Watzlawick’s First Axiom of Communication
12. What is your organization communicating in the relationship that is healthcare? photo credit: flickr user BertBeckers
13. Relationships are the foundation of healthcare experience success — but there are elements outside of interpersonal interactions that can be bettered. Bettering … services settings messages photo credits: flickr users GregGavedon.com, Hosue of Sims, Jason-Morrison
14. “If it’s a new problem, perhaps it demands a new approach. If it’s an old problem, it certainly does.” –Seth Godin photo credit: flickr user iowa_spirit_walker
15. healthcare has lots of old problems … the fax machine is the most efficient means of transporting a medical record across the country photo credit: flickr user New Jersey State Library
16. healthcare has lots of old problems … thousands of medication errors occur every year in the United States photo credit: flickr user soccerkrys
17. healthcare has lots of old problems … gaming systems are doing more for wellness awareness than healthcare systems photo credit: flickr user ShadyL
20. bettering is more comfortable healthcare … photo credit: flickr user just.Luc
21. most healthcare experience improvements are focused on increasing satisfaction—the power to transform healthcare, and truly make healthcare awesome, lies with engagement
22. what is engagement? new service creation on the health platform to help people live healthier photo credit: flickr user wwwes
23. how does a service engage? “The three essential elements of a product or service that will resonate within a community in a meaningful and compelling way are Relevance, Utility, and Delight.” –Mike Arauz photo credits: flickr users Velo Steve, secret agent X-9, Beneteau Sailor
24. Relevance: Is the service being offered important or meaningful to me? photo credit: flickr user Velo Steve
25. Utility: Is the service something I need? photo credit: flickr user secret agent X-9
26. Delight: Does the service incite some level of joy? photo credit: flickr user Beneteau Sailor
28. what is good for patients can be good for organizations, too photo credit: flickr user Jeff Bauche._.·´¯
29. “The days of great companies, products and services naturally finding their markets are long gone. Old notions of demand are out. Experiences — good, bad or indifferent — count for everything.” – Brian Solis photo credit: flickr user j-ster
30. “The standard of good has been replaced by good enough, which is a way of justifying the mediocre. When we encounter the good enough standard on a regular basis, we come to accept it as normal.” –Chris Guillibeau photo credit: flickr user Atwater Village Newbie
31. good enough is no longer good enough … photo credit: flickr user Jerrycharlotte
32. it’s time we … for more: www.makehealthcareawesome.com by: drew weilage