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Information Therapy: Prescribed Information as a Reimbursable Medical Service [Paperback]

Donald W. Kemper (Author), Molly Mettler (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Book Description

April 4, 2002 1877930881 978-1877930881 1
Information therapy changes the way people get health information. Instead of hunting for information on the Web or in bookstores, people will receive the information they need through prescriptions from their doctors, hospitals, or health plans. In their visionary new book, Information Therapy: Prescribed Information as a Reimbursable Medical Service, authors Donald W. Kemper and Molly Mettler lay out both the concept and the practical details of how information prescriptions will become a core and expected part of health care.

Information Therapy shows how integrating information prescriptions into health care will improve the quality of care and better meet the demands of today’s consumer. Doctors agree that patients should be well informed about the treatments they receive, but two major barriers impede this objective. First, there is just not enough time in each visit for doctors to fully explain what patients need to know, and, second, much of what they cover is quickly forgotten. Information therapy is the fix, and the result is better-informed consumers, higher-quality care, fewer medical mistakes, and lower health care costs.


Editorial Reviews

From Library Journal

Drawing on their experiences with Healthwise, their nonprofit medical information company, Kemper and Mettler make an excellent case for including information services in medical practice but fail to acknowledge fully other efforts to educate patients. They present the concept of information therapy as health information prescribed by physicians and delivered electronically to patients through handheld devices. The authors state that such "prescription-strength" data should be evidence-based and "reviewed and sanctioned by licensed medical experts" not medical librarians. Yet some of the vignettes illustrating these concepts include examples of public library use and a consumer resource center in a hospital, cited as "high-touch." Although the writers advocate accreditation for health web sites and note many excellent ones, they fail to recognize the National Library of Medicine's MEDLINEplus, which already links to evaluated health information web resources.And what is the role for librarians? Besides indexing information resources with appropriate medical codes, researching content development, and providing Internet access, we can become "certified information therapists." That this therapy would require a prescription seems contrary to our promotion of open access to information. Surprisingly, the authors fail to note research on effective health education and consumer health information services diabetes education is just one example. This is particularly astonishing given their promotion of evidence-based practice. Since Kemper and Mettler want to see information therapy as part of the mainstream, it's unfortunate that they've also chosen to trademark their concepts, giving the impression that their book was written to sell Healthwise products rather than to change public policy. Despite these flaws, all health science librarians should read this as it may help to change provider thinking about our role in the healthcare system. Margaret Allen, Library Consultant, Stratford, WI
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Review

"Information therapy is at the center of the future of health management. Every health professional should read this book!" -- John W. Rowe, MD
Chairman, President & CEO, Aetna Inc., author of Successful Aging

Product Details

  • Paperback: 248 pages
  • Publisher: Healthwise; 1 edition (April 4, 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1877930881
  • ISBN-13: 978-1877930881
  • Product Dimensions: 8.9 x 7 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,023,690 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Profound, iconoclastic, and persuasive, June 5, 2002
This review is from: Information Therapy: Prescribed Information as a Reimbursable Medical Service (Paperback)
Information Therapy: Prescribed Information As A Reimbursable Medical Service by medical consumer activist Donald W. Kemper and Medical self-care and health promotion expert Molly Mettler offers an original and ground breaking proposition to change modern health care for the better. The definition of "information therapy" is that patients should be provided with accurate information, based on evidence, as part of the treatment. The individual chapters comprising Information Therapy discuss how to best put this idea into solid practice, and its impact on the health care industry, and more. Information Therapy is a profound, iconoclastic, persuasive, and a welcome, recommended contribution to the national debate over the nature and need of public health care policy today.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Good business view of Health Information Technology, November 16, 2010
This review is from: Information Therapy: Prescribed Information as a Reimbursable Medical Service (Paperback)
If you are in the Health Information Technology field, and you've wondered how you, as an IT person, can deliver value to your business in the form of new ideas, this book is for you. Healthcare IT is a relatively new field attempting to marry Healthcare and Information Technology, and like other emerging fields, is full of cool new technology and cool new ideas, so much so that its easy to forget (or not know or not care) why we are doing what we are doing (or what our domain experts tell us to do). This book provides a patient centric answer to these questions, and provides many new ideas on how IT people (who are closest to the data and therefore know best how to use it) can provide value to patients and persons seeking health information, and indirectly to their own businesses. If you've been in the Healthcare IT business for around 6 months or more (and/or are familiar with your data and workflow), you would definitely benefit by reading this book.
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