Discover the Power of Online Communities in Healthcare

Two evenings ago I had the pleasure of presenting for a meeting of about 40-50 members of the Washington State Healthcare Executives Forum (WSHEF) in Bellevue, WA. The subject of the presentation was "Discover the Power of Online Communities in Healthcare".

In organizing the presentation, I spent a lot of time thinking about the major points I wanted to get across. I figured they'd leave the meeting with only a couple of major themes- so I set out to define those themes. Further, I knew it had to be non-technical and easy to understand.

My first point was that everyone in the room is a member of a community of healthcare professionals and the "place" that allows that community to come together is that conference room. The room provides the place.

Then I had them think about how all real-world communities need a place- like a church, park, coffee shop- the places are where the community takes shape. A major point: Communities need a place.

My goal was to make the point that the "online" in "online community" is just a place, like a conference room or church. Once this point was clear, I wanted to help them visualize how this idea could be applied to a healthcare system. Department managers, project teams, administrators are all examples of potential communities that could use an online place attached to an Intranet.

I asked myself what I wanted the people in the room to do after the meeting. I came up with three basic points:

  1. Look at their organization in terms of communities of people that need depend on one another.
  2. Consider how they currently interact and what needs and goals they have
  3. Consider how an online "place" could help them accomplish those goals more effectively

I really wanted to drive home the idea that online community "places" can help hospitals improve knowledge sharing, manage internal communication channels, increase access to information and promote culture.

I think the message got through- both in terms of their organizations and the WSHEF organization itself. I'm providing an experimental online community space for the group and had about 30 people sign-up to check it out.

I would have loved to talk about all the cool tools and resources that make it all happen- but I knew I had to keep it geek-speak free.

I'm glad to have the chance to do this presentation and hopefully there are more on the way.