Wisconsin hospitals are participating in a new program that aims to help increase access to notes that doctors write about their interactions with patients.
OpenNotes in the Media
Comstock’s Magazine: Back and Forward: Catherine DesRoches on an Open Approach to Medical Info
OpenNotes Executive Director Catherine DesRoches gives her perspective on the movement to get patients…
Fast Company: THE MOST CREATIVE PEOPLE IN BUSINESS 2017
THESE INSPIRING LEADERS ARE SHAPING THE FUTURE OF BUSINESS IN CREATIVE WAYS. SCROLL TO SEE THE TOP 100. #88 Tom Delbanco, Cofounder, OpenNotes
Inside Philanthropy: What Was It My Doctor Said? The Funders Behind the Movement for Open Notes
Can the simple act of sharing a healthcare provider’s notes with a patient improve health outcomes? The OpenNotes movement
PM360: A note about OpenNotes
“He is a frequent flyer.” This is a term we reserve for patients who consume a lot of services. In the outpatient clinic, it’s the type of patient who comes for frequent visits perhaps more often than medically necessary. Oftentimes, more than we’d like.
Salzburg Global Seminar: Tom Delbanco on how patients can save doctors
Tom Delbanco, co-founder of OpenNotes, and Koplow-Tullis professor of general medicine and primary care at Harvard Medical School discusses the origins of “PeoplePower” and the..
Wall Street Journal: The Delicate Question of Sharing Medical Information With Adult Children
As baby boomers increasingly assist their elderly parents with health issues large and small, families are having to rethink
Becker’s Health IT: 6 questions with UCLA Health CIO Dr. Michael Pfeffer
While many physicians report frustration with EHRs, Michael Pfeffer, MD, took an interest in the technology — a decision that led him down a new career path. After earning his medical
UW: Joann Elmore Receives 2017 Eisenberg Award
Dr. Joann Elmore, professor, is the 2017 recipient of the John M. Eisenberg National Award for Career Achievement in Research from the Society of General Internal Medicine (SGIM). This award
How to Get Patients to Take More Control of Their Medical Decisions
For years, patients have been hearing the same message from the health-care industry: Get involved.
They’re told they need to do more to monitor their chronic