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Innovation & Technology November 19, 2018

Stanford Medicine magazine explores how digital technology is changing health care

By Patricia Hannon

The latest issue of Stanford Medicine magazine explores the potential for digitally driven innovation to transform health education, diagnostics and care.

A lot of people grouse about the erosion of their relationship with their doctors since the introduction of electronic medical record systems.

Maybe I'm just lucky, but I've had the opposite experience. I feel more connected to my current physician than I have others in the past, and that's only partly because she engaging and empathetic.

Mostly, it's because interactions with her and her staff no longer involve me wasting time waiting to make appointments, get test results, fill prescriptions, or even ask questions about my health. Direct conversations with my doctor — via email, text, or by phone — happen at times that work for me. And, finally, if I need to check something in my medical record, I can access it online in a matter of seconds.

At Stanford Medicine, that's only one example of the kind of digital technology that is being tapped to transform the future of health care, a subject we explore in the latest issue of Stanford Medicine magazine.

"We've embraced this transformation in every regard — identifying 'digitally driven' as one of the key pillars in the new integrated strategic plan that will inform and guide our strategy for the future of Stanford Medicine," Lloyd Minor, MD, dean of the School of Medicine, says in his letter introducing the magazine.

That, he says, means taking advantage of high-tech, without losing the essential element of human touch, to ensure a health care future that is both proactive and personalized.

Themed stories in the magazine explore ways the latest technology has created opportunities for innovation in medical education, diagnostics and patient care, and to better understand what makes our bodies and minds tick. Some examples:

  • A Stanford neuroscientist and colleagues are building a virtual hippocampus to better understand the area of the brain that forms and retains memories, and to better treat neurological disorders.
  • A surgeon, educator and innovator has developed sensor-enabled training tools that are designed to advance the use of touch in diagnostics.
  • A young computer scientist helped design a program to assess clinicians' surgical skills.
  • A researcher is creating digital interventions for use in our cars, home and workplaces to empower us to better manage our well-being, and writer Hanae Armitage gave some of his technology a spin.
  • More physicians are taking advantage of electronic health records to better collaborate with each other and patients to improve care; and at a national symposium on EHRs, physicians explored ways to update EHR technology to enhance clinical decision-making.
  • Four unique programs, including the use of holograms to enable more precise removal of diseased breast tissue and an app that uses Google Glass to help children with autism better read human emotion, show how Stanford Medicine fills gaps in care.
Also in this issue, in an excerpt from his autobiography released after his death, transgender scientist Ben Barres, PhD, describes the emotional process of transitioning to male. And another story illuminates the difficult decisions parents and caregivers face when rare genetic disorders are diagnosed during pregnancy.

Image by Bryan Christie

About Stanford Medicine

Stanford Medicine is an integrated academic health system comprising the Stanford School of Medicine and adult and pediatric health care delivery systems. Together, they harness the full potential of biomedicine through collaborative research, education and clinical care for patients. For more information, please visit med.stanford.edu.

hannon-patty

Associate editor

Patricia Hannon

Senior associate editor Patricia Hannon helps edit Stanford Medicine magazine as well as the Stanford Medicine News Center; she is also a manager of special projects. She is a San Jose State University graduate in journalism and anthropology, and a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist who joined Stanford Medicine in 2017 from The (San Jose) Mercury News and Bay Area News Group. She is an expert in digital publishing, newsroom operations and managing crisis communications, having navigated a Bay Area-wide team of breaking news editors, reporters and photographers through the organizational shift into a digital-first publishing model. In her more than 20-year tenure in newsrooms in the Bay Area and South Carolina, she managed teams covering a variety of topics including government, law enforcement, education, religion, health and natural disasters. A San Jose native and fifth-generation Californian, she enjoys live music, especially when her two musician sons are performing; hiking in the spectacular Bay Area parks; traveling with or to visit friends and family; and supporting the San Francisco Giants, win or lose.