Could Facebook be Your Platform?
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My guess is youâve probably never asked yourself this question. A quick preview:
1) Technical barriers arenât the limiting factors to Facebook as a care coordination platform.
Can you imagine Facebook as a care coordination platform? I donât think itâs much of a stretch. Facebook already has 650 million people on its network with a myriad of tools that allow for one-to-one or group interactions.
What would it take to make Facebook a viable care coordination platform?
- More servers to handle the volume â" not a problem
- Specialized applications suited for health care conditions â" not a problem
- Privacy settings that made people comfortable â" more on this later
- A mechanism to identify and connect the members of YOUR care team â" really tough, BUT this is NOT a technological problem, but a health system one
Suppose you are a 55â"year-old woman who is a brittle diabetic. Your care team might include a family physician, an endocrinologist, a registered dietitian, a diabetic nurse, a ophthalmologist, a podiatrist, a psychologist, and others. Ideally youâd have one care plan that coordinates the care among members of the team, including you.
Whatâs the reality of todayâs health care non-system?
- There is no formal designation of âyour team.â
- There is no mechanism to designate one âplanâ that coordinates the plays among your team members.
- Itâs possible that multiple quarterbacks are calling the plays for your care.
- Itâs possible that members of your team have no knowledge THAT you are being treated by others and HOW you are being treated by others.
Care coordination today is in the stone ages â" there is no system for care coordination.
Supplying a modern Facebook-type technology platform doesnât change this. The major limiting factors in Facebookâs becoming a care coordination platform arenât technological.
Letâs look a bit deeper.
2) Facebookâs company DNA wonât play well in health care.
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerbergâs definition of an open social graph doesnât fit well with peopleâs expectations of privacy in health care. Hereâs how Zuckerberg described his views:
âYou have one identity,â he emphasized three times in a single interview with David Kirkpatrick in his book, âThe Facebook Effect.â âThe days of you having a different image for your work friends or co-workers and for the other people you know are probably coming to an end pretty quickly.â He adds: âHaving two identities for yourself is an example of a lack of integrity.â
IMHO, Zuckerbergâs notion of a single identity isnât going to fly with peopleâs private health care information. Sharing everything about yourself might be an idealistic goal for a 26 year old gazillionaire, but when it comes to most medical information, people will want to share information with their care team, not with the world. Zuckerberg doesnât recognize that the default for medical information for almost everyone is âdonât share,â not âshareâ.
In contrast, LinkedIn is a platform built for business networking. It assumes that people will want to share different types of information with business colleagues than with their friends. This strikes me as a much more realistic notion of identity, but you can certainly disagree.
Hereâs another example of how Facebookâs company DNA would violate trust. Facebook has a reputation for pushing privacy boundaries, and then falling back only if/when people complain (and they must complain loudly).
Since its founding, Facebook has done a 180 degree turn on its business model. The company started with the premise that default for your information was âprivateâ unless you specified otherwise. By May 2010, the default had become âpublicâ unless you specifically modified privacy settings. Why? â¦because they realized that the valuation of the company was driven by the quantity and quality of data about YOU.
So how would this work in health care? âOops, we changed privacy settings on you and revealed your HIV statusâ¦wonât happen again, sorry.â Disaster!
3) Could Facebook become the care coordination platform of the future? If not Facebook, then what?
Letâs circle back to the original question âCould Facebook be a platform for care coordination?â
My answer is NO!
What are alternatives?
Its pretty much wide open. Here are some possibilities:
- A new specialized company will become a dominant player in care coordination
- The market could fragment â" companies might specialize based on patient conditions, geographic concentration, other factors.
- Existing healthcare technology companies, e.g. EHR (electronic health record) companies, could extend their care coordination functionality
- Your local ACO or integrated delivery system could position itself as YOUR platform for care coordination
- An existing social platform (e.g., Facebook, LinkedIn) MIGHT turn the corner and add care coordination functionality
- or ??
Hope youâve enjoyed going through the thought process. Letâs continue the conversation.
Vince Kuraitis JD, MBA, is a health care consultant and primary author of the e-CareManagement blog, where this post first appeared.
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Filed Under: THCB
Tagged: Care coordination platform, Facebook, Vince Kuraitis Apr 11, 2011
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