How do we know that social media is important to health care?
I began a recent speech at a medical school with a question that many busy clinicians might be asking: How do we know that social media is important to health care?
Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
All
Publications
I began a recent speech at a medical school with a question that many busy clinicians might be asking: How do we know that social media is important to health care?
Susannah Fox delivered a keynote address to a symposium hosted by the Albert Einstein College of Medicine at Yeshiva University.
A new study finds that mortality rates increase during upward cycles in the economy, and decrease during downward cycles.
How patients and caregivers seek health information in the digital age
A majority of Americans without health insurance say they will obtain it in the next six months, but only 26% say it is because of the health law’s requirement.
Susannah Fox will speak at the Joslin Diabetes Center’s annual innovation conference in Washington, DC.
Two separate, but related conversations have been prominent on Twitter—one about the government shutdown and the other about President Obama’s health care law, the landmark legislation at the heart of the Congressional impasse that triggered the shutdown.
Officials are hoping that the health exchange web sites will drive access and enrollment. But some of the groups most likely to not have health insurance are the same as those groups most likely to not be online.
This is the fourth year for the popular Unmentionables panel at Health 2.0, covering topics that aren’t discussed in health care.
Susannah Fox will be the kick-off speaker for a discussion of how data is transforming health and health care.
Notifications