I just stumbled across the "attic" of Tom Ferguson MD, who was the "George Washington of patient empowerment," as CNN put it this month, citing his work since 1975 to create a world of freedom and power for patients.
(That's you, in case you didn't notice. Thank him.)
My favorites (above) are #88 and #89 from his 2003 slides. Here's my narrative:
In the industrial age, the means of production and ability to create value were centralized in massive facilities. If you didn't own the factory, you didn't have freedom and power.Those slides were made in 1995, when the Web had just been born, but they hit the nail on the head: today we have access to tremendous resources, and that empowers and enables us.
In the information age, those with access to information have access to power and can create value.
Please don't interpret these slides as meaning that in the world of the future there will be no doctors. That's idiotic. Rather, Tom's vision is that "we the people" have a lot more ability to contribute than was once thought. And both costs and quality can improve as a result.
Compelling evidence to support this was collected into the white paper (above). Further independent evidence from around the world is provided by the Patient Centered Primary Care Collaborative, about which I wrote in May.
Steal Tom's slides. Show them to others, put them in your decks when you give talks. And re-view the PCPCC slides, with their data on cost and quality. It's a new world out there - feed your head!