Archive for 2015

Hospital Care Patterns Vary Greatly for Children with Complex Medical Issues

Medical XPress – Cites a recent study conducted by Shawn Ralston, associate professor of pediatrics; David Goodman, professor of pediatrics, community and family medicine, and of the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice; Wade Harrison, Geisel ’16, researcher at the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice; and Jared Wasserman, Analytic Project Manager at the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice. The study examines the population of children with medical complexity in three states—Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont, and found significant differences across the hospitals providing care in inpatient days, outpatient visits, emergency room visits and diagnostic tests.

Should Facebook Inc. Open Up Its User Data for the Greater Good?

The Motley Fool – Cites research by Benjamin Crosier, a postdoctoral fellow in the department of psychiatry, in article about how Facebook’s restrictions on its user data is affecting academia. Crosier is researching links between social-media activity and problems such as drug addiction. Crosier, who had hoped to build an app, was denied access to the Facebook data he was using earlier this year and is now petitioning the social network, hoping he can resume his efforts.

Yale Signs on to Apple’s ResearchKit for Heart Disease Study

Fierce Medical Devices – Quotes Lisa Schwartz, professor of medicine, community and family medicine, and of the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical practice, about Apple’s ResearchKit platform, and expresses skepticism towards using the platform for research, as it relies on patient-reported information rather than facts to fuel clinical trials. “Just collecting lots of information about people—who may or may not have a particular disease, and may or may not represent the typical patient—could just add noise and distraction,” says Schwartz. “Bias times a million is still bias.”