Thursday, December 31, 2009

Refrigerated Breast Milk Keeps Integrity for 4 Days - ABC News

Breastmilk wins again...

To Your Best Health,

The Personal Medicine Team

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Personal Medicine - Pediatrics / Children's Health News

Check out this website I found at personalmedicineinternational.com

Kids more likely than adults to catch swine flu. See our daily News.

To Your Best Health,

The Personal Medicine Team

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Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Personal Medicine International - FOR PHYSICIANS

Physicians does this story sound familiar? Go Mobile and Reduce Your Practice Costs by 80% with the Personal Medicine Platform.

To Your Best Health,

The Personal Medicine Team

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Check it out... Olive Oil Consumption Prevents Breast Cancer!- Nutrition News

Check out this website I found at personalmedicineinternational.com

Check it out... Olive Oil Consumption Prevents Breast Cancer!

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Personal Medicine International - Pediatrics / Children's Health News

Check out this website I found at personalmedicineinternational.com

Cool article on hemangiomas today for Parents...

To Your Best Health,

The Personal Medicine Team

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Sunday, December 27, 2009

Personal Medicine - About Us

About Us

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Mission

Personal Medicine’s Mission is to be the world’s trusted leader in attentive house call care.

Core Values

Personal Medicine was founded to empower individuals and reinvent the lost art of house call medicine through innovation. The members of Personal Medicine have come together because we believe in the combined potential of house calls and the Internet to have a Transformative impact on the Physician-Patient Relationship. Innovation Transforms Relationships.  These Core Values represent what motivates us at Personal Medicine.

  • We believe that the content, community, and commerce of the internet plays a central role in transforming one’s health.
  • We believe that a human being’s comfort is of utmost importance during an illness and that in home care is best for families.
  • We believe that delivering exceptional evidence based care takes time and careful consideration.
  • We believe that the care of newborns, multiples, children with chronic illness and the elderly is facilitated by in home care.
  • We believe that prevention is critical for optimal health.
  • We believe that families should have direct means of communication with their physician enabled by emerging technologies.
  • We believe that paperless practice and transparent consumer access of medical records is an essential component of best practice health care.
  • We believe that the physician-patient relationship is best managed by physicians and patient families in direct medical practice.

 

More about our Mission...

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Personal Medicine Coming to #Chicago - FOR BUSINESSES

Looking for a quick halt of your rise in healthcare costs? Combine High Deductible Plan with our house call service memberships for your employees, Chicago, all Cook County Zips now with coverage in 2010!

To Your Best Health,

The Personal Medicine Team

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Personal Medicine International - Preventive Health News

Check out this website I found at personalmedicineinternational.com

New Mammogram recommendation Controversial...Click on the web link above to view...

To Your Best Health,

The Personal Medicine Team

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Saturday, December 26, 2009

Personal Medicine International - Pediatrics / Children's Health News

Check out this website I found at personalmedicineinternational.com

Here is today's Pediatric Health News

To Your Best Health.
The Personal Medicine Team

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Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Personal Medicine Corporate Benefits #chicago - The News

10/26/09 Benefits That Strike a Chord

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http://www.hreonline.com/HRE/story.jsp?storyId=276392716

In her first employee-benefits column, Carol Harnett highlights two innovative ways employers can combine imagination with good medical outcomes, decreased costs and increased employee satisfaction. Carol is a highly respected employee benefits consultant, speaker, writer and trendspotter.

By Carol Harnett

I am a Bruce Springsteen fan. Along with my friend, Pete Church, who is an HR executive, I recently ventured to the Apollo Theater to watch the taping of Elvis Costello's interview show, Spectacle, with The Boss.

On the drive home, we found ourselves discussing some of Springsteen's points about how to make linkages with audiences and relating it to our work. Springsteen says music is more than melody and lyrics. If Bruce can't place a fingerprint on our imaginations, can't connect to his listeners, then his songs are simply notes and words.

But how do HR leaders create benefit plans that strike a chord with our employees? For my first column in HREOnline TM , I searched for employers and service providers who combine imagination with good outcomes, decreased costs and increased employee satisfaction.

One innovator is Tom Emerick, who has spent the last 25 years working in benefit design for BP, Burger King and, most recently, Wal-Mart, where he was vice president of global benefit design.

In the 1980s while at BP, Emerick realized that a small percentage of employees drove a large portion of the benefit dollars. He began a multi-phase pilot that incentivized transplant candidates to go to the Mayo or Cleveland Clinics for evaluation and surgery, if deemed appropriate.

And thus was born one of the first employer-sponsored domestic medical-travel programs. Emerick was recently recognized by Healthspottr as one of the top 100 innovators in healthcare for this work.

He has gone on to evolve his approach, saying it's key for employers to first establish a tracking methodology to identify employees at high health risk and then "picking out the right place and getting the employees there."

What makes the places "right?" Emerick believes it's the medical facilities' ability to achieve "desired patient outcomes in the safest and least invasive way." Examples include Intermountain Healthcare, Geisinger Health System, Mayo Clinic, Cleveland Clinic, and Cancer Treatment Centers of America, he says.

Emerick says that if even one high-risk employee participates in a year, the savings can be an immediate 5-percent reduction in benefit costs, so it's probably no surprise that more employers today are actively considering medical travel as part of their health benefit plans.

Another innovator is Dr. Natalie Hodge -- a pediatrician who carries an iPhone and tablet computer in her medical bag.

Four years ago, she made the decision to view her patients and their parents as customers. In addition to their wish for easier communication, including by phone and e-mail, she responded to their desire for house calls instead of office visits.

I don't know about you, but I haven't experienced a house call since Dr. Patrick came to see me when I was around 5 years old. My vague memory before he arrived is of my mom swathing me in blankets despite having a fever. The first thing Dr. Patrick did was strip off the blankets. I don't remember much else, but I loved him ever since.

After taking care of me, my pediatrician went into our kitchen, sorted through the things I could eat and drink, and sent my dad out with a list of items to purchase.

Hodge says that's exactly how it works today. The only difference is that she uses technology to bring her office to the patient. "Babies start with a clean slate of medical records," she says, "so it's easy to create their record electronically and give the parents access to it online."

Hodge now operates an e-commerce business called Personal Medicine International Inc ., to help other physicians follow in her concierge medicine footsteps.

What makes Personal Medicine interesting to employers is that it may be used in conjunction with high-deductible health plans as an option or an add-on. Employers can seed the employee's health-savings account or health-reimbursement account with funds to offset the monthly fee or purchase the service directly for workers. Employees can opt to cover one or several of their children, a dependent older parent or the whole family.

Since physicians see their patients wherever it's convenient, parents can go to work and the doctors will meet them at their offices or the childcare centers. Employees are more productive and satisfied with their benefits. And as the H1N1 flu virus heats up, parents can avoid hospitals and the risk of cross-contamination.

For me, what is interesting about both of these approaches to employer-provided healthcare is that employees received equal -- or better -- care in a way that may be more meaningful to them -- and employers gain cost savings within the first year.

This avenue of connecting employer goals with employee desires reminds me of some thoughts from the man himself, Bruce Springsteen, as quoted in an Oct. 17, 2007 Rolling Stone interview.

"My business ... is trying to connect to you ... . You are involved in an act of the imagination together, imagining the life you want to live, the kind of country you want to live in, the kind of place you want to leave your children. What are the things that bring you ecstasy and bliss, what are the things that bring on the darkness, and what can we do together to combat those things?"

Carol Harnett is a highly respected consultant, speaker, writer and trendspotter in the fields of employee benefits, health and productivity management, health and performance innovation, and value-based health. Follow her on Twitter via @carolharnett.


October 26, 2009

Copyright 2009© LRP Publications

 

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Tuesday, December 22, 2009

Internet More Important than Doctors for Health Research - MarketingVOX


Click to enlarge

The average patient in the US now relies on a variety of media and resources to research disease, treatment, and general health information - and key in this mix is the internet, a category that Manhattan Research has dubbed 'e-Health.'

Perhaps more astoundingly, new data from the firm on the subject reveals that the internet surpassed physicians as the most popular health resource for the first time last year. (via MarketingCharts)

Treatment Discussion

With that shift, there is opportunity for marketers: namely brands that provide online patient education tools and resources, such as a doctor discussion guide, can become part of the treatment decision process. This is already starting to happen. Consumers who use pharmaceutical product websites report this source highly influences their healthcare decisions, according to the study, called Manhattan’s Research’s Cybercitizen Health v9.0.

In addition, after consumers view direct-to-consumer (DTC) advertisements, they are more likely to seek out additional information from the internet than any other source, including doctors, family and friends, and 1-800 numbers.

Social Media

Post-DTC online information sources used by consumers include general health sites, search engines, product sites, pharmaceutical company sites, social networking sites, and blogs/messageboards/chat rooms.

Social media has become a chief venue for such information gathering, in fact. More than 80 million US adults use it to create or read content on blogs, message boards, chat rooms, health social networks and communities.

The report found that the e-Health consumer market has grown significantly in the past five years, from 90 million consumers online for health in 2004 to nearly 160 million in 2009.

Physicians we must get on the bandwagon with social media. There are 160 million e health consumers. Don't be put out of business by the internet. Transparency will set you free ( from all of your overhead) We can show you how.

Happy Holidays,

The Personal Medicine Team

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#chicago Stop the Rise of Health Insurance Costs for your Employees with Personal Medicine

Business Benefits

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HR executives contemplating options for employee health benefits should consider the 10 to 15 % yearly rate of rise of  traditional full coverage plans to be a unsustainable option.  Consider the option of providing a high deductible plan for your employees at drastically lower cost and combining with a MSA contribution of up to 5,800$ a year.  Your employees may pay for all our member services with those pretax MSA dollars, providing  an attentive house call option and attractive tax savings. For information on group employer discounts for members contact sales@personalmedicineinternational.com This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

As mentioned in Human Resource Executive Online... (click to read article)

Chicago Employers contact us for member benefit pricing for all Cook County Employees!!

To Your Best Health,

The Personal Medicine Team

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Sleepwalking is especially common in children and usually not dangerous

The child is sleepwalking. According to some estimates, up to 17 percent of children have a sleepwalking experience between ages 4 and 12, peaking between ages 8 and 12. It is less prevalent among adults, affecting perhaps 4 percent of that population, although it can be more hazardous in that group.

Sleepwalking has been part of the human experience probably since there has been a human experience -- it was mentioned in literature before Hippocrates -- but not much is known about it even now. How it happens, yes; why, not so much.

It usually occurs during the first third of the night's sleep, and the characteristics are similar: Sleepwalkers often have open eyes, although they have a confused or glassy look. They might talk, although not clearly. Waking them will result in serious confusion, so experts say it is best not to.

"Monitor it, but let it run its course, unless they are headed out the front door," said Jodi Mindell, a clinical psychologist and professor of psychiatry at St. Joseph's University in Philadelphia. It can help to guide them back to bed, where they will probably fall back asleep and have no memory of what transpired after they wake up.

What you have with a sleepwalker is a "sleeping brain and an awake body," said Donna Arand, clinical director of the sleep disorder center at Kettering Medical Center, near Dayton, Ohio. "Sleepwalkers tend to do things typical of daytime activities. They have some, but generally a very diminished, awareness of their surroundings. They can negotiate routine patterns."

There is also a genetic impulse: The chances of a child's sleepwalking increase tenfold if a parent or another sibling were sleepwalkers.

Odd behaviors occasionally occur. Some -- boys in particular -- have a tendency to mistake the closet for the bathroom. There have also been instances of sleepwalkers making a sandwich and eating it, and, rarely, of adult sleepwalkers driving.

The vast majority of kids will outgrow sleepwalking, which is why doctors don't consider it a serious medical problem. "When parents come in, what I do is explain and reassure them," said Judith Owens, a pediatrician at Brown University Medical School who has been studying sleep for 15 years.

Safety can be a concern, however: tripping over something, falling down stairs, climbing out a window, wandering out the door in the middle of winter in your pajamas. So what parents of sleepwalkers need to think about, Mindell said, is putting gates at the top of stairs, locking outside doors and windows, hanging bells on bedroom doorknobs, putting away sharp objects and generally picking up.

"A Lego village in the middle of the bedroom floor won't do well," she said. Baby monitors in rooms can alert parents that a child is on the move, she said, "but they're not so good if someone is just walking quietly rather than crying."

'We have no idea'

What experts call sleep architecture plays a significant role in sleepwalking, also called somnambulism and formally known as partial arousal parasomnia.

Everyone has a definitive sleep cycle, which lasts between 90 and 120 minutes and repeats itself through the night.

The cycle is divided into REM (rapid eye movement) sleep and non-REM sleep. The non-REM part occurs first and is itself split into three stages. Sleepwalking nearly always occurs in the third stage of non-REM sleep, generally the deepest sleep of the night. The stages are marked by different brain wave activity, and in stage three, the brain waves become reallly sloooww. Then suddenly, in some people, bam! Out of bed and sleepwalking.

How come? Don't know.

"We have no idea of what's going on in the brain," said Mindell, who has been studying sleep for more than 20 years. Arand, who has been working in the field for 30 years, theorizes that the brain's chemistry may not make the complete switch from one sleep stage to another, and an "ambiguous state" of sleepwalking can result.

So why do kids grow out of it? There are some answers, particularly in the dynamics of stage three non-REM sleep. That stage closes dramatically as one ages. It can be as much as 50 percent of non-REM sleep in the very young and usually starts decreasing by about age 8 or 9. It's generally down to 25 percent by age 18, says Arand, and most people lose stage three altogether by age 40. Usually, as stage three disappears, so does sleepwalking.

Don't get too close

Adult sleepwalking can be a different animal. It can occur during what's left of stage three non-REM sleep, but it can also occur later in the sleep cycle and be more dangerous.

To understand why, let's go back to sleep architecture and the REM/non-REM divide. Different things happen in each: Non-REM sleep restores one physically, while REM sleep, which lengthens during the night, is about settling things in the brain.

In REM, said Helene Emsellem, a physician and medical director of the Center for Sleep and Wake Disorders in Chevy Chase, the brain "is rehashing the events of the day, throwing all the data points up in the air, then sorting through and interconnecting all this information, deciding what becomes memories, what fits in the learning process, and making you become the interesting, creative, well-balanced, fun person you can be." Most dreaming occurs during the REM cycle, which is where trouble can lurk.

The brain essentially paralyzes the skeletal muscles of the body during the REM cycle's sorting activity, said Emsellem. "Maybe that's to prevent dangerous things from happening" -- such as responding to perceived danger in dreams in which you are being attacked, or chased by somebody like, say, the repo guy.

But the paralysis doesn't always work. In the late 1980s, "REM sleep behavioral disorder" was reported in humans, periods "when one isn't fully paralyzed and can respond motorically [by overcoming the paralyzed skeletal muscles], without the ego saying, 'Don't do that,' " Emsellem said.

Violent episodes can result when the lack of paralysis combines with a response to suggested danger in a dream.

Which is why, said Emsellem, one should be very careful about waking an adult sleepwalker. "If they are fighting somebody off in their dream, they don't know who you are and you could get hurt," she said. "It's best to leave the room, turn the lights on, and call to the person from outside the room."

Or, said Arand, "prepare to duck, and wear a helmet."

Cures? Reducing stress and sleep deprivation, which have been identified as causes in adults.

For the young, the re-introduction of naps, some experts say, can help. If sleepwalking episodes are predictable, Owens suggests "scheduled awakenings": Wake the child up about a half-hour before the anticipated episode, make sure he's fully awake, and then let him go back to sleep. Keep it up for a month; "it seems to work in about 50 percent of the cases," she said. Different sleep environments can also be a cause -- sleepovers, for instance.

But for the young, the most reliable cure is growing up.

Nice Article from Wash Post on Sleepwalking in Kids

To Your Best Health,

The Personal Medicine Team

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Nutrition News

Check out this website I found at personalmedicineinternational.com

Here is Today's Nutrition News!

To Your Best Health,

The Team at Personal Medicine

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Monday, December 21, 2009

Personal Medicine Nutrition News

Check out this website I found at personalmedicineinternational.com

Here is today's Nutrition News

To Your Best Health,

The Personal Medicine Team
" Your Doctor Comes to You"

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Friday, December 18, 2009

Testimonials

Testimonials

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Member-Families Share their Stories

"Personal Pediatrics combines state-of-the-art technology and great medical skills with the kind of family oriented service and care that I remember growing up with. I wholeheartedly recommend them."
– Grant Williams

"The convenience of home visits is truly priceless. We knew we did not want to bring three children to a doctor’s office and expose them to all of the germs, as well as the ordeal of the trip itself, so the service was a godsend for us. The fact that I can pick up the phone at any time and speak directly to our physician is so reassuring. This is the future of family medicine and the best decision we could have made for our family."
– Dr. Erin Shannon-McGowan, Clinical Psychologist

“I have a hard time describing what a relief and a pleasure it has been to have this service. My children suffer from chronic sinus, ear and allergy problems, so I have a lot of questions. When I need answers, I can pick up the phone and talk to our pediatrician immediately. No gatekeepers…no waiting around. It really puts my mind at ease.”
– Anne Pokoski

“As a mother with Multiple Sclerosis I found the convenience of having an affiliate pediatrician is priceless to our family. Dr. Hodge is able to address the concerns and illnesses of our school age daughter and teenage son carefully, conscientiously and privately in the comfort of our own home.“
– Mariam Weisel

“Dr. Hodge is available to care for my son Mark at times that are convenient for me and my busy schedule as an attorney. She does visits in the home, at preschool where I can meet her and has been available to address all of our questions”
– Kim Shapiro

Here is what our member families say about Personal Medicine Affiliate Physicians...

Happy Holidays,

The Personal Medicine Team

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Thursday, December 17, 2009

Personal Medicine Affiliate in Chicago Speaks Out

"With the way health care is going, I not only see physicians being proactive to evolve our model of practice as a good thing, I see it as a necessary thing. If we do not do something now to change the way we practice medicine, we will not survive. As a new attending 8 years ago, I was forced to work as an employee for a practice because of my debt and the fact that starting my own practice would have been essentially impossible. They kept making me see more and more patients while making it almost impossible to form physician-patient relationships. I woke up and realized I had become a modern day indentured servant. I think that becoming a Personal Medicine physician will allow me to become the physician I once dreamed of while improving the health care of my patients."

Dr Joseph, Family Practice, Personal Medicine Affiliate, Cook County Chicago

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Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Personal Medicine- Housecall FAQ for Patients

FAQ for Patients

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What is a Direct Medical Practice?

There is a growing trend of physicians directly forming financial relationships with patients in primary care for the purposes of providing health services.  While specific services and fees may vary from practice to practice, one thing is the same: these providers offer an option to deliver primary care services directly to their patients through monthly membership fees rather than insurance reimbursements. For more on benefits of direct medical practice for consumers, learn more  http://www.dpcare.org/dpc

How do I join?

It's simple, just search under patient signup on our site, and locate the affiliate in your zip code by city, state or zip.  Once you reach your affiliate's home page, you may research their credentials and practice philosophy.  Apply for membership by clicking " apply now" button on the site, and fill out your demographic and payment information.  You then land on the Patient Health Record section of your chart which is your secure medical record.  Your physician will recieve an automated email notifying him or her of your application, and will call you with final approval and for scheduling of your first visit!

What if you don't have a provider in my zip yet?

We currently have licensed doc's in NY, NJ, MI, KY and TN transitioning into house call practice.  Please contact us through the site with your zip code of interest and opt in to our email marketing list, follow us on Twitter, Linked In and Facebook and we will keep you up to date as we add affiliate members in your neighborhood.

What if I move in the middle of a membership year?

We would love to transfer your membership to another house call affiiate in your new neighborhood, otherwise you will revieve a prorated percentage of your membership fee back.

How is my medical record kept?

Our affiliates chart with a paperless medical record system which will maintain your chart in the latest cloud based secure technologies.


How do you qualify your providers?

Our affiliates apply for licensing of our platform in their specific geographies.  Our credentialing team verifies their DEA, Training, Medical license, board certification.  We also license physicians who have a special interest in providing the attentive kind of care involved in making house calls, as well as those who place a priority on maintaining an efficient, streamlined, paperless, transparent medical practice. 

What if I need a specialist? Your affiliate will provide for most aspects of your care, known as " The Medical Home Model"  He or she is specially trained in taking care of most of your heath care needs.  When you and your affiliate agree specialty care is necessary, specialty followup will be arranged as needed.

What if I need a lab test or an xray? Your affiliate will have a preferred method for testing, either by a local lab or hospital.  Many common tests will be done right in the home!

What if I need to go to the hospital? Your affiliate will maintain relationships in his prefered hospitals.  You will need to go through your regular insurance for in hospital care, the Personal Membership provides house call services only.

I have dedicated money to a Medical Savings Account this year. Can I pay with this money? Absolutely.  You may use your HSA or MSA debit card right through our site. This makes membership an affordable option, given the tax advantages.

Can my employer purchase the Personal Medicine Program as a benefit on my behalf? Absolutely.  We are working with many businesses to help them stem the unsustainable rate of rise of their employee benefit premiums.  Our membership fits well in combination with a high deductible plan.

How many house calls are included for the 1500$ Five visits a year.

I hear a lot of discussions about the Medical Home Model, what does this mean?

To understand why membership-based direct primary care facilities offer better primary solutions, it's important to first understand the difference between primary care and specialist/hospital care:

  • Primary care is the "home base" or "medical home" for your health care. Your primary care provider is responsible for your overall wellness. Any time you have a health concern, your first visit is to your primary care provider, who knows all of your medical history and can help you make the best decision about your health. With most health issues, your primary care provider can diagnose and heal the problems you're experiencing.
  • Specialist and hospital care is for serious, complex illnesses and life-threatening emergencies. If you're severely injured in an accident, for example, an ambulance takes you to the emergency room. Or, if you're diagnosed with cancer, you may need hospital care such as surgery, radiation, or other treatments.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

All your questions about Personal Medicine house call program answered here.

To Your Best Health,
The Personal Medicine Team

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Monday, December 14, 2009

Nutrition News

Check out this website I found at personalmedicineinternational.com

Here is today's Nutrition News,

To Your Best Health,

The Personal Medicine Team

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Thursday, December 10, 2009

Personal Medicine Secures Malpractice Discounts for Personal Medicine Physicians

Personal Medicine International Endorses 
Keane Insurance Group for Medical Malpractice 
Brokerage Services

      St. Louis, Mo., December 9, 2009 -- Personal Medicine International, a leader in concierge-based medicine, has officially endorsed the Keane Insurance Group as its preferred vendor to provide medical malpractice brokerage services to all of PMI’s physician members.

      “We are very pleased to forge this relationship with Keane, one of the leaders in the medical malpractice industry,” says Dr. Natalie Hodge, the president and founder of Personal Medicine International.  “We believe Keane will be able to provide real value to our physicians by helping them find the best and most cost effective liability coverage for themselves and their practice.”

      Dr. Hodge spent three years developing and refining the personalized house call platform creating cloud-based technology and e-commerce platform solutions for mobile medical practice.

      She co-founded Personal Medicine International, a health care service organization whose mission is to connect primary care doctors in direct patient practice relationships to patients in attentive mobile medical practice.  The house call platform is noted as an innovation in "Customer Experience".  She is the author of The Personal Pediatrics Primer for the Progressive Parent, and was a featured speaker at the Mayo Clinic's Transform Symposium in September 2009 during a section entitled "Content, Commerce, Care and Choices" featuring the emerging Health 2.0 industry.  Dr. Hodge's special interests in pediatrics include nutrition, prevention and consumer facing Internet.

      “We are excited about the opportunity to work with Dr. Hodge and the physicians of Personal Medicine International” says Kristopher Perkins, professional liability consultant for Keane.  “We have significant respect and admiration for Dr. Hodge and her model to deliver patient care, and we expect this model will reduce risk and liability while improving patient satisfaction.  We are thrilled to be involved.”

      The Keane Insurance Group is one of the largest brokers of medical malpractice in the nation.  With more than 5,000 clients in 40 states, the firm brokers over $80 million in annual premium each year.

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Pediatrics / Children's Health News

Check out this website I found at personalmedicineinternational.com

Today's Kids Health News.

The Personal Medicine Team

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Nutrition News

Check out this website I found at personalmedicineinternational.com

Today's Nutrition News!

From The Personal Medicine Team

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Sunday, December 06, 2009

TED: How the Internet enables intimacy | Personal Medicine Affiliate Network

Nice Video detailing how internet enables intimacy, we are interested in helping Physicians Develop more intimate relationships with patients enabled by internet and our web platform for house calls.

Nice.

More on house calls here...

http://personalmedicineinternational.com/pmi/

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Saturday, December 05, 2009

Our Bodies, Ourselves: support this pioneer of empowered, participatory healthcare | e

Here is a nice site which explains Participatory Medicine

To Your Best Health,

The Personal Medicine Team

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Nutrition News

Check out this website I found at personalmedicineinternational.com

Today's Health and Nutrition News, From The Personal Medicine Team

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Friday, December 04, 2009

Nutrition News

Check out this website I found at personalmedicineinternational.com

Here is Today's Nutrition News from the Personal Medicine Team

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Thursday, December 03, 2009

Pediatrics / Children's Health News

Check out this website I found at personalmedicineinternational.com

Here is Today's Pediatric Health News From The Personal Medicine Team

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Wednesday, December 02, 2009

Nutrition News

Check out this website I found at personalmedicineinternational.com

Latest Nutrition News From the Personal Medicine Team

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Tuesday, December 01, 2009

Nutrition News

Check out this website I found at personalmedicineinternational.com

Click on the link above the all the latest nutrition news from the Personal Medicine Team !! To Your Best Health

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