Posts Tagged ‘Surgeon General’

Marc Kaplan Director of Communications at Penn Medicine

Sunday, April 11th, 2010

To Link To Post: http://bit.ly/9WMC3G

Marc Kaplan Board Member of PRSA Health Academy and Program Co-Chair for the upcoming PRSA Health Academy Conference April 14 – 16 in Chicago. The title of the conference this year is “Effective Communication in an Era of Health Care Transformation: Practical Strategies to Navigate Change.”


Some of Marc’s VlogViews about the PRSA Health Academy Conference:

“You are going to discover people from government, people from industry, people from physician practices, healthcare futurists, healthcare practitioners that have been around a long time….you’re also going to meet people on the social media space as well”

“We are excited about the US Surgeon General [Regina M. Benjamin] joining us for the pre-conference which is great.”

“Before the opening of the conference it is going to be a very intimate setting so you will really have an ability to talk with the US Surgeon General and talk to her about factors she is looking at, her job, and what her challenges are going to be like”

* NOTE* Doug Simon will be presenting at the PRSA Health Academy Conference April 15, 2010 in Chicago “Post-Modern Online Outreach: Earning Media Coverage for Your Brand”.

Email AimeeA@dssimon.com. to receive a discounted rate to attend the conference.

Sanjay Gupta, MD, Chief Medical Correspondent, CNN

Tuesday, April 7th, 2009

To link to post: http://bit.ly/ofJ4N

Winner, National Association of Medical Communicators Health Communications Achievement Award. Sanjay Gupta discusses the important role of Medical Communicators, how to get your story on CNN and the role of the U.S. Surgeon General.

“What we do as doctors, we communicate. More than anything else. We are communicating one on one with patients. But we are also communicating to the masses through the various media. That’s the role of the Surgeon General and the cabinet secretaries. If you can’t get that message through no matter how good it is, it is going to fall flat. So I think that the fact that a person who does television as well as being a doctor would be considered for this position shows the emphasis and consideration for this sort of work, which I think is terrific.”

“The people who are doing it [medical reporting] have to do their homework with great diligence, more so I think than any other scope. But also I think we need to make it engaging as possible to actually send a message that people remember. People tend to change their lives based on the content that they hear and you want to make sure you’re changing those lives, big or small, in a very meaningful positive way.”

“I think the politics and the medicine are going to be increasingly blurry with health care reform and out of that is going to come a lot of tangential stories which people may not be aware of…and out of that your going to get stems cells, health IT, regional improvements in public health infrastructure, you’re going to look at bio terrorism in ways that we’ve never seen before. Your going to look at the overall cost effectiveness of our health care system, tort reform, things that I think are good predictors of our health care of system overall.”

AMA Communications Conference Series:

Allan Hamilton

Allan Hamilton

Laura Jana

Laura Jana

Frank Papay

Frank Papay

Maria Simbra

Maria Simbra

Kevin Soden

Kevin Soden

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