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a presentatio n by Regina Holliday nting Patients, Impatient Paint Photo by Ben Crosbie

Painting patients

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Presentation of our family story and the future of patient engagement.

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Page 1: Painting patients

a presentation by Regina Holliday

Painting Patients, Impatient PaintingPhoto

by B

en C

rosb

ie

Page 2: Painting patients

When I was a child,I would draw in Church.

My mother said that was okay,As long as I would draw the sermon…

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Thinkingoutside the text boxand focusingon the border

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Art, balance, hot spotting and the IEP

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There was a little boy named Freddie who lived in Maryland and a little girl in Oklahoma named Regina and they watched television.

Television can be an opiate of the people or an educational tool.

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Patient Reported Data is very important.

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When the abuse becomes too bad call this number.

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14 years later, Fred would meet Regina on stage in a scenic painting class at Oklahoma State University.

We would talk of Stephen King’s Dark Tower.

We would fall in love.

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Fred and I married, worked and played together for many years.

Fred continued his schooling and worked as video store clerk.

In 2005, Fred would get a PhD in film studiesand would write his dissertation

About “Buffy the Vampire Slayer.”

In 1998, Freddie III joined the family game

followed by the littlest player Isaac in 2006.

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From 1994 through 2008,I was working full time in retail sales, but I would try to find time to paint.

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I would paint

neighborhood murals. I would also

teach art at a local preschool.

I would work in a toy store.

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The Holliday Family Christmas 2007

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Everything we ever wanted… Resolutions January 2008: 1. Get Medical Insurance for the whole family 2. Get little Freddie into a special needs school 3. Fred gets a job in his field 4. Spend more time together as a family 5. Get a two bedroom apartment

Freddie’sIEP Binder

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Fred was happy with his new job.

But he was very tired,

He went to the doctor and was diagnosed with hypertension.

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During the months of

January, February and March of 2009,

Status Lines…

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Fred Holliday went to his doctor’s appointmentsand suffered at home fromJanuary to March 2009.

We purchased medications from this CVS or were given samples by Fred’s doctor.

For pain: Heating Pad, Heat Packets, Bengay, Tylenol, Advil, Hydrocodone-apap 5-500, Naproxen Sodium and Ultram ER

Muscle relaxants:Skelaxin and Cyclobenzaprine

High Blood Pressure: Atacand HCT32

Indigestion: AcipHex-rabeprazole

Laxatives: Senna, Miralax, Maalox and Dulcolax

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On Friday March 13th, We went to the ER because Fred was in so much pain .

We waited three hours before being sent home.

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The Last Primary Doctor’s Appointment: A Very Short Play

Regina: “I didn’t see you weigh him.”PA: “We don’t always weigh our patients”

Doctor: “Mr. Holliday do you think maybe you are depressed?”

Fred: (Looks up at Doctor with a look of dismay.)

Regina: “Of course he is depressed. He is in excruciating pain. We want an MRI.

…I am worried about his kidneys.”

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Fred was hospitalized on March 25th 2009 for the administration of tests.

On March 27th, he was told while alone thathe had “tumors and growths.”

He was scared and confused and did not understand.

His oncologist left town for the next four days to a medical conference and was not reachable by phone or email.

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What was the diagnosis? What were the treatment options? Would he get a pain consult?

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Systems Error:More than one bad doctor

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This is my husband’s medical record.

I was told it would cost

73 Cents

per page

And we would have to wait 21 days to get a copy.

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“She must not have tried very hard to get the record….”Comparing access to an unpublished book by

Stephen King to accessing the

Electronic Medical Record while hospitalized.

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“Go After Them, Regina.” April 18, 2009

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After waiting for 5 days for a transfer

to another hospital for a second opinion,

We were sent with an out of date and incomplete medical record and transfer summary.

The new staff spent 6 hours trying to

cobble together a current medical record Using a telephone and a fax machine.

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This is the

vital clinical informationfrom Fred’s electronic medical record.

Presented in the style of the Nutrition Facts Label.

Then painted on the wall ofPumpernickel’s Deli in Washington, DC.

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What about the chemotherapy?We were told an order for Sutent had been placed.

It did not come. The hospital pharmacy kicked out the orderas it was too expensive.

I would have to order it from a specialty pharmacy and have delivered to our apartment.

This painting is “Sutent in a Shadow Box.”

It is a mixed media piece of pills & paper.It is priced at cost in homage of the retail price of the pills alone.

17 pills $24,285.71

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I am trying to talk with Christine Kraft and epatient Dave.

Within one day were in email contact and then spoke on the phone.

By ten o’clock May 4th 2009, I was talking on the phone with Dave’s Oncologist about my husband’s cancer.

Why did we get more help and answers from

Social Media than from our local hospital ?

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Going to Hospice.

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We fulfilled our final 2008 resolution on June 11th 2009.

We moved into a two bedroom apartment so I could care for Fred in home hospice.

He died six days later on June 17th, 2009

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Painting Advocacy meets Social Media

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This is the painting 73 cents.

This is the vital patient story, the social history , the sacred heart of Fred’s

ELECTRONIC MEDICAL RECORD.

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On Tuesday, October 20th 2009 we dedicated the mural,

“Where do we go from here?”

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On May 27th , I met group of amazing folks at a small Health 2.0 meeting. They asked, “ What was the worst thing that happened?”

I responded, “Lack of access to the medical record.”

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Change can be Scary.

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How would youdefine Meaningful Use?

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On July 13, 2010 I had the honor of speaking before the assembled at HHS.I presented the patient voice within

Meaningful Use.

There was another Regina there that day

Doctor Regina Benjamin, Surgeon General presented her very gripping reason she supported Electronic Medical Records adoption in the united States.

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On September 13th 2011, I met Regina once again. This was the launch of the Consumer e-Health Program

The “I” in HIT at the Department of Health and Human Services.

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The in HIT

Here is the real meaning ofthe “I” in HIT.

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There may be set backs on Our way to patient data access.,

but we will prevail.

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All over the world, patients Are demanding their data.

They are demanding accessto the data from their doctors,from their hospitals,and from the devicesinside of their bodies.

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Inside of every EMR there is a patient story,And sometimes it is told by Betty of Bellin Health.

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The Learning Health System and Chaordic Organization

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2 year study at Primary care settings of Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Geisinger and Harborview

90% patients responded they understood what they had read & were not bothered by it.

1-2% were concerned/offended by the contents of the notes

87% of those patients enrolled in this study did check the notes.

Doctors said the study either only added a modest increase in work or that it was negligible.

80% Patients claimed greater adherence to medication protocols due to access to the notes.

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Consumer Reporting System for Patient Safety, May 2013

When the abuse becomes too bad call this number.

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Why not have CDS (clinical decision support) for patients? If a child’s toy can figure any item in the world in 20 questions, why

Can’t we have CPOE and CDS in every hospital and family practice?

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Who taught you how to be a patient?

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Welcome to the Walking Gallery.

Telling the patient story one jacket at a time.

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Freddie grows beyond peering through a door crack to walking in a Gallery.

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Isaac grows up.He misses his father’s arms.He joins the gallery as an artist.His jacket is named “Feelings.”

He is marching in a rally supporting patient data access.

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Standing out and looking different,

Can be uncomfortable or frightening.

But is often needed for advocacy.

You can take a negative and turn

it into a POSITVE.

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As of November 2012, 188 unique Walkers have joined wearing 208 jackets.

The Gallery has representatives on five continents, but the majority of Walkers reside in the US.

One artist creates the majority of the art, but new artists are joining and currently make up 14% of content creation.

The Gallery is promoted heavily on twitter, facebook and personal blogs.

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We each walk inspired by our core mission centered on the patient story.

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Welcome to the Gallery. Welcome to the future.

- @ReginaHolliday, #TheWalkingGallery