Showing posts with label annual. Show all posts
Showing posts with label annual. Show all posts
A Disease Management Care Blog Annual Report for 2011
Tuesday, May 13, 2014

It likes to think of itself as a unique ongoing journal club on the organization, delivery and financing of health care. If the DMCB was soup, thered be three ingredients:
1) reliance, whenever possible, on peer-reviewed and published evidence,
2) a physicians "real world" experience and
3) a ready dash of skeptical humor.
The DMCB must be doing something right. Despite a narrow mix of medical science, economics, effectiveness and policy, the DMCB has attracted a relatively large and elite readership. If youre reading this, that means you.
Sophistication
When it looks at the ISPs of its many return visitors, the DMCB sees dozens of academic institutions, big and small name news media outlets, publishing houses, trade associations, information technology businesses, Congress, CMS, the White House, state government, foundations, commercial insurers, hospitals, health care consulting organizations and population management service providers. Many are household names.
It doesnt stop there. The DMCB has been contacted by and gotten to know folks from all levels in the health care industry. Based on those conversations, it knows this a smart group. The author of this blog is a better person for it.
The DMCB knows each regular visitor, twitter follower and Google subscriber has been earned one person at a time. It knows its elite readers are knowledgeable, active or interested in health policy, population health management, the patient centered medical home or primary care. These are not casual readers.
And you have a lot of company:
According to Google Analytics mix of ISP addresses and cookies, DMCB Ver. 2011 had 29,000 unique visitors with 42,000 visits. A third were repeat (defined as more than one) visits. While there is no definition of a "regular" reader, the number of visitors with more than 50 DMCB "hits" in 2011 numbered 5153. There were 786 visitors with more than 200 hits.
The DMCB also has 416 Twitter followers. According to TweetReach, the DMCB regularly reaches almost 1500 persons with its tweets. Depending on re-Tweets, that number can exceed 7000.
There are also 466 Google RSS subscribers.
These 2011 numbers suggest there are thousands of persons that regularly read the DMCB. Every individual visitor, follower and subscriber returned or opted-in based on the DMCB content and only the DMCB content. There is no marketing, emailing or use of any services to promote the DMCB. It doesnt have the advantage of a sponsoring institution or explicit link to a big-name business. And its readership continues to slowly grow.
The DMCB Web Juggernaut
The DMCB is regularly lected and linked in many prestigious web outlets, include HealthHombre, Health Affairs, KevinMD, Forbes, and many sister blogs. Its also appeared in the web sites of USAToday, Wall Street Journal, the Washington Post, Dartmouth Atlas, Business Week and the National Review. Its also been linked in the intranet web sites of many insurers, provider organizations, and health information tech companies.
And, by the way, according to YouTube, the DMCBs videos to date have had 33,486 views.
As testimony to its growing web presence, the DMCB is on the first page when the term "disease management" is Googled. The DMCBs growing web traffic has ironically made its "Comments" section a target by spammers with links to its dubious medical web sites. With only one unobtrusive Google "Ad" that generates pennies per click, it still got a check for $100 (prompting the derision of the DMCB spouse, but thats another post). The DMCB has also been offered - and used - cash to provide link backs. It also had one complaint lodged over copyright infringement over an image (the post has since been removed, with apologies). Simply put, folks are paying attention.
Last but not least, the DMCB is proud of its four 2011 peer reviewed publications in Population Health Management, Self Care and the Journal of Comparative Effectiveness Research.
And a thank you....
... to the readers who have commented or emailed with feedback, comments and insights. To the readers who use their precious time and keep coming back.

Have Good News to Tell About Your Care Coordination Initiative Share It At the Care Continuum Alliance Annual Meeting!
Monday, March 24, 2014
The Disease Management Care Blog feels your pain.
You help lead a unique and innovative care coordination initiative. Your program has some preliminary data that strongly suggests quality has increased while costs have remained neutral or gone down. Patients are satisfied. Docs are happy. You even have a patient anecdote or two.
But somethings missing.
While your institutions marketing department has been supportive, you believe that the customers you want to serve are tired of glossy brochures, breathless press releases and chatty sales reps. Your customer meetings are fun, but you cant tell if the positive feedback is the result of real insight or that second glass of wine.
On the other hand, the prospect of publishing your findings in some scientific journal is too dreary to contemplate.
You know some more meaningful is at stake. You want to share your good news and get some feedback.
Heres your solution: the Care Continuum Alliance Annual Conference. Hundreds of individuals just like you - individuals who give a damn about patients, are excited about making a difference and want to make a living doing it - will be available to give feedback. Who knows, some of them may talk partnerships. Others will resent your competition, confirming that you are on the right track.
The CCA Call for Proposals can be found here. You have until March 6 to submit.
You help lead a unique and innovative care coordination initiative. Your program has some preliminary data that strongly suggests quality has increased while costs have remained neutral or gone down. Patients are satisfied. Docs are happy. You even have a patient anecdote or two.
But somethings missing.
While your institutions marketing department has been supportive, you believe that the customers you want to serve are tired of glossy brochures, breathless press releases and chatty sales reps. Your customer meetings are fun, but you cant tell if the positive feedback is the result of real insight or that second glass of wine.
On the other hand, the prospect of publishing your findings in some scientific journal is too dreary to contemplate.
You know some more meaningful is at stake. You want to share your good news and get some feedback.
Heres your solution: the Care Continuum Alliance Annual Conference. Hundreds of individuals just like you - individuals who give a damn about patients, are excited about making a difference and want to make a living doing it - will be available to give feedback. Who knows, some of them may talk partnerships. Others will resent your competition, confirming that you are on the right track.
The CCA Call for Proposals can be found here. You have until March 6 to submit.

Lots of Reasons Why You Should Attend The Patient Centered Primary Care Collaboratives Oct 21 5th Annual Summit
Tuesday, March 4, 2014
Youll see the good work that the PCPCC is doing as the leading national organization advocating on behalf of the Patient Centered Medical Home (PCMH).
Along with an auditorium-full of like-minded learners, youll benefit from an agenda that is packed with clinicians from the real world of medical practice who have developed successful medical homes.
Youll get to meet others who share your interest in an innovative and rapidly evolving approach to primary care.
Youll be in Washington DC at the height of beautiful fall weather.
And, last but not least, youll get your own copy of the PCPCC Report, Care value, community connections: Care coordination in the medical home. According to this newswire press release, the report "includes the insights of thought leaders" on the theories and tactics behind the definition, role and function of care coordination.
The immodest Disease Management Care Blog couldnt have put it better itself, especially because its the author of the

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