I’m really trying to understand the impact of the TRIP Database. If you care about TRIP please take this very brief survey http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/JJKH25W
Thank you in advance.
I’m really trying to understand the impact of the TRIP Database. If you care about TRIP please take this very brief survey http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/JJKH25W
Thank you in advance.
At Evidence2010 I was a aware of a number of themes (in reverse order):
Obviously, I’m very pleased about the last one. Overall, a very good, thought-provoking conference!
I had the pleasure of attending the Evidence2010 conference. One role I undertook was to tweet about the presentations, in a way sending a summary of the presentations. One talk, by Paul Glasziou, highlighted the diversity of conditions a GP will see (compared with specialists). He reported that 30 ‘conditions’ accounted for 50% of consultations. A number of people wanted to see the 30 conditions and Paul has sent me a spreadsheet. It’s actually 32 (not 30), so here goes:
Interestingly (!) the top 10 account for 27%
I highlighted a while ago that I often add small comments to Facebook that I didn’t consider worthy of a blog post. So, continuing the theme started then, a few highlights of comments I’ve made on Facebook.
As mentioned above – the TILT logo!
I’ve not done this for a while but, for another project, I was checking out the functionality so thought why not! Below is a list of the top ten articles viewed from TRIP in September 2010:
An interesting mix of papers and I’m intrigued to see a video in the top ten. We recently boosted our video ‘collection’ and now have over 3,100 videos, so good to see they’re useful!
Facebook is massive, Microsoft is massive, Bing (Microsoft’s search engine) is less than massive. Bing want to change this and they’re hoping that a tie-in with Facebook will help. See this Techcrunch article for further details. As the article states:
“Starting today…. you will automatically start to see links that your friends have “liked.” These will appear in a separate module, with related social links called out. The example Microsoft gives is if you are searching for San Francisco steak houses and one of your friends liked Alexander’s Steakhouse in San Francisco, that would appear as a result along with the name of your friend.”
I like this idea a lot. It’s dependent on a number of variables coming together, but at a high-level I like this.
I particularly like it as I can see something similar working in the world of health. What’s better for a GP searching for an article on the diagnosis of prostate cancer than one that a trusted colleague has approved? How about, using the extended social graph to identify experts in the field of prostate cancer – what do they like? Finally, what does the evidence have to say (as shown in the current TRIP search)?
However, this also requires a number of variables coming together. However, if Facebook/Bing paves the way, then why not? An important component for this to work is a clinician’s functioning social graph – where can that comes from?
Let’s hope TILT works!!
The launch of TILT (which stands for Today I Learnt That) is fast approaching and we’re pulling together the design and the actual programming – so time for a bit more information. First the logo, which we love!
At the simplest level TILT is an easy way for users to record any learning they may have experienced. This was designed principally around clinicians who need to record this sort of information for revalidation/recertification. Although, from our pilot, it became obvious that clinicians like to record their learning even if it’s not specifically for revalidation.
However, the real beauty and strength of TILT is that the ‘TILTs’ are viewable by other clinicians. As in ‘real’ life clinicians can learn from each other.
Some example TILTs include:
The clinicians in the pilot really enjoyed themselves and reported lots and lots of learning. For me, the biggest joy was seeing the way clinicians transformed complex issues/articles into nuggets of learning. From an information perspective this is gold dust.
The pilot involved around 10 active users and generated hundred’s of TILTs in 6 weeks. If we have 100 active clinicians what sort of impact will that have? What about 1,000?
As one clinician fed back “you’ll be amazed at what you don’t know”
After a few false alarms we finally got the 10,000 registered users. Now these figures have been audited – I’m very very happy with this figure. I’ve done some analysis and the following are the top 25 countries where registrants come from:
TRIP truly is international! And here’s a selection of countries where we only have a single registrant:
I love running TRIP and this sort of milestone and analysis make me very proud. I think the next milestone will come relatively quickly via Facebook, where we have 494 ‘fans’ – only 6 to go!
On August 4th we announced that we had 10,000 registered users. After some internal checks we now realise this was wrong.
The reason for the discrepancy was a number of spam accounts. We became aware of these about 6 weeks ago (and introduced a CAPTCHA system to prevent future spam accounts) and have since been tracking down these accounts. We now feel we have a pretty accurate figure for actual accounts and as of now, we have 9,873 registered users.
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