Journal of Participatory Medicine Launch
By Cindy | Popularity: 24%Improving health care:
Journal of Participatory Medicine
will document methods that work
for patient/provider collaboration

Launch at Connected Health Symposium
features essays by visionaries in
health care, Internet, high tech, business, and sociology
Patient engagement and patient empowerment are popular topics, with hundreds of thousands of Google hits, but there’s precious little information on how to do them well. A new academic journal being launched this week, the Journal of Participatory Medicine, aims to change that.
“Because health professionals can’t do it alone”
Participatory Medicine is a new approach that encourages and expects active patient involvement in all aspects of care. It builds on the work documented at the e-patients.net blog, whose slogan is “Because health professionals can’t do it alone.” The group’s landmark 2007 paper “E-Patients: How They Can Help Us Heal Healthcare” tells many stories of engaged, empowered e-patients who substantially improved their own outcome and the outcomes of others by supplementing or even going beyond what their physicians alone could do.
Authoritative and accessible; peer-reviewed by patients and health care professionals
Free continuous updates online
The Journal will publish continuously and will be freely accessible to the public at http://jopm.org. Following the inaugural issue in early 2010, articles will be published as they are reviewed, accepted, and edited; there may also be single topic special issues. Email alerts will inform subscribers when new material has been posted. Anyone can sign up to receive these alerts at http://jopm.org/register.php
Mission: To transform the culture of medicine
The Journal’s mission is to transform the culture of medicine by providing an evidence base for participatory health and medicine. It aims to advance both science and practice, focusing on six content areas: research articles, editorials, narratives, case reports, reviews, and updates on related research in other media. It will explore how participation affects outcomes, resources, and relationships in healthcare; which interventions increase participation; and the types of evidence that provide the most reliable answers.
Importance of a broad-based peer review process
The Journal uses a new, broad-based peer review process to significantly improve on traditional academic journals. While still managed by experienced journal editors, JoPM’s peer review process will be open to a far broader set of minds for scrutiny of methods and analysis. Improved accuracy and effectiveness are vital as the population ages and healthcare costs continue to rise.
Bringing thought leadership from many disciplines to healthcare
Because of the complexity and size of the healthcare challenge, the Journal of Participatory Medicine invites participation from all disciplines that can help.
- Co-Editors are Jessie Gruman, PhD, Founder and President of the Center for Advancing Health, and author of AfterSchock: What to Do When the Doctor Gives You—or Someone You Love—a Devastating Diagnosis; and Charles W. Smith, MD, Executive Associate Dean for Clinical Affairs and Professor of Family and Community Medicine, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, and Founder of eDocAmerica.
- Deputy Editor is Alan Greene, MD, Founding President of the Society, Co-founder of DrGreene.com, Clinical Professor at Stanford University and Chief of Future Health at A.D.A.M., Inc.
- Managing Editor is Sarah Greene, publishing and new media entrepreneur with three startups in science, health, and medicine acquired by Wiley, Elsevier, and Thomson Healthcare.
- Founding Co-Chairs of the Society are Daniel Z. Sands MD, MPH of Cisco Systems and Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, and his patient “e‑Patient Dave” deBronkart, of ePatientDave.com and TimeTrade Appointment Systems.
Some of the articles featured in the first issue:
- Investor and futurist Esther Dyson on “Why in the world ‘participatory medicine’?”
- Longtime JAMA editor George Lundberg MD and former AARP board chair Joanne Disch PhD, RN: “Why healthcare professionals should be interested in PM”
- Kate Lorig RN, Dr.P.H., Director of Stanford School of Medicine’s Patient Education Research Center: “Why people should be interested in PM,”
- David Lansky, CEO of Pacific Business Group on Health and former Senior Director at the Markle Foundation, on “Why payers should be interested in PM”
- Kurt Stange MD, PhD, Case Western Reserve University and editor of the Annals of Family Medicine, and Gilles Frydman, founder of the ACOR.org network of cancer communities, on “Building an interdisciplinary field of inquiry and practice”
- Richard Smith MD, former editor of BMJ, and Musa Mayer, famed breast cancer activist, on “The Value and Questions of Peer Review”
- and many more articles
Launch is the closing event at Connected Health Symposium
The official launch of the journal will occur on Thursday, October 22 at 3:30 PM as part of a panel discussion about the “Changing Role of the Patient in Health Care and the Changing Rules of the Game for a New Publication.”
About the Society for Participatory Medicine
The Society for Participatory Medicine was founded in 2009 to learn about and promote PM through writing, speaking, social networking, and other channels. It builds on the work of Tom Ferguson, MD, who envisioned the e-patient movement within months of the birth of the Web browser.
Society membership is open to anyone who shares the belief that PM should be the operative model for healthcare, that all involved parties share in a collective decision-making process, and that the patient is central to that process. Through PM we can teach patients to take responsibility for their own health and providers to effectively invite patients into this.
About the Center for Connected Health and the Connected Health Symposium
The Center for Connected Health, a division of Partners HealthCare in Boston, develops innovative and effective solutions for delivering quality patient care outside of the traditional medical setting. The Center engages in pioneering research in a wide range of connected health-related areas and works to advance the field through its convening and publishing activities. The term “connected health” reflects the range of opportunities for technology-enabled care programs and the potential for new strategies in healthcare delivery. The Connected Health Symposium asks how information technology – cell phones, computers, the Internet and other tools – can help people manage chronic conditions, maintain health and wellness, and age with independence.
Journal of Participatory Medicine: http://jopm.org or www.facebook.com/JourPM
Follow the journal on Twitter: @jourPM and #WhyPM
Society for Participatory Medicine: http://participatorymedicine.org or www.facebook.com/participatorymedicine
Connected Health Symposium: http://www.connected-health.org/events/symposium-2009.aspx

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