Steroid Treatment Card: More than half don’t have one & just 10% of patients carry it at all times

September 9, 2010

“The steroid treatment card acts as a reminder to patients about the potential side effects and dangers of abrupt cessation, as well as a warning to healthcare professionals about patients medication status: ultimately it aims to ensure patient safety”

Elizabeth Rusby, a 4th year medical student at Manchester University, has published an interesting report in the BJGP following an audit of a small group of patients who were being prescribed long term steroids. The paper concludes that despite the British National Formulary guidelines that advise on carrying steroid treatment cards, 53% didn’t have a card and only 2 out of the 19 patients revealed that they carried their card at all times.

“these findings reflect those of Zeppetella’s survey (which was reported back in 1998!), suggesting that this may be a long-standing, widespread problem”

If it’s so obvious that what we’re doing isn’t working why aren’t more of us trying to start leveraging the most widely spread technology on the planet – the device we take everywhere and persist in keeping at arms length?

How long before drug manufacturers awaken to this simple mHealth opportunity and put QR Codes on their boxes to enable patients to download and display a relevant screensaver?


“What mHealth does, at its heart, is provide that incentive”

September 9, 2010

Now, I don’t like emergency rooms. The hope of living well another 20 years is plenty of incentive for me. But it’s not enough for most people. Hypertension is called the silent killer for a reason, and if everyone around you looks like the passengers in Wall-E you won’t even notice morbid obesity. What mHealth does, at its heart, is provide that incentive. It delivers a continuing reminder that trouble is coming, and it cuts the cost of care once the chronic condition is acknowledged. And chronic conditions like diabetes, heart disease and the like represent a full third of our $2.5 billion health care market

Because constant monitoring will be paid for. There will be a business model that makes this free… …your brother’s employer can have more influence over his behavior than you can, I’m afraid. What if he said, “get tested or get out — I’m not interested in paying $100k for something I can pay $10k for now and be done with

Dana Blankenhorn, ZDNet Healthcare


Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 41 other followers