A Yelp for Medical Treatment

There’s a great new Las Vegas Startup company, HealClick, that is launching a yelp like service for medical treatments. They’ve launched a $50,000 Indiegogo campaign to raise money for their company. Check out that page for more info and a video of what they’re working on.

I love the concept of a Yelp for medical treatments. Certainly we see some of this happening already on websites like PatientsLikeMe and other communities. However, I love that HealClick is trying to create a more specific connection between a patient’s symptoms and treatments with those with similar experiences. In most of the existing patient communities you have to already know that you’re a diabetic or have lupus. From what I understand, the goal of HealClick is to help someone who hasn’t completely identified their health issues connect with other people with similar symptoms.

Plus, they’re focusing on complex immune-related illnesses that have overlapping symptoms and often no clear medical treatment. The ability to find and compare treatment options is very interesting. In these situations the patient is extremely motivated to find every option possible and the doctor just doesn’t have time.

Certainly this could open a pandora’s box where the rogue patient starts thinking they can treat themselves. However, from my experience that isn’t what happens or those patients would react this way regardless of what tools they use. More common is patients become informed of something new and then they consult with their doctor on the options they found.

Turns out, this is the shift that’s happening across all of medicine and not just chronic diseases. The patient is becoming more involved and more informed. Hopefully HealClick can provide some structure to how a patient learns about their health issues.

January 16, 2014 I Written By

John Lynn is the Founder of the HealthcareScene.com blog network which currently consists of 15 blogs containing almost 6000 articles with John having written over 3000 of the articles himself. These EMR and Healthcare IT related articles have been viewed over 14 million times. John also manages Healthcare IT Central and Healthcare IT Today, the leading career Health IT job board and blog. John launched two new companies: InfluentialNetworks.com and Physia.com, and is an advisor to docBeat. John is highly involved in social media, and in addition to his blogs can also be found on Twitter: and and .

PatientsLikeMe Social Network Refutes Published Clinical Trial

Here is the actual press release from PatientsLikeMe:

Nature Biotechnology Paper Details Breakthrough in Real World Outcomes Measurement

CAMBRIDGE, Mass., April 25, 2011

Today, PatientsLikeMe reveals the results of a patient-initiated observational study refuting a 2008(1) published study that claimed lithium carbonate could slow the progression of the neurodegenerative disease, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). PatientsLikeMe, a health data-sharing website with more than 100,000 patients and 500+ conditions, announces its study results in the journal, Nature Biotechnology.

“This is the first time a social network has been used to evaluate a treatment in a patient population in real time,” says ALS pioneer and PatientsLikeMe Co-Founder Jamie Heywood. “While not a replacement for the gold standard double blind clinical trial, our platform can provide supplementary data to support effective decision-making in medicine and discovery. Patients win when reliable data is made available, sooner.”

After the original claim was published by the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 348 ALS patient members reported their off label use of lithium on PatientsLikeMe. Just 9 months later at the International ALS/MND Symposium, PatientsLikeMe presented preliminary results that lithium was not having an observable effect on the disease progression of these patients. The results were revealed before any of the formal follow up trials enrolled patients.

PatientsLikeMe developed a novel algorithm designed to match patients who reported taking lithium with a number of other ALS patients that had similar disease courses. By using a matched control group, PatientsLikeMe was able to reduce biases associated with evaluating the effects of treatments in open label, real world situations and improve the statistical power of the study making each patients contribution more meaningful.

Heywood adds, “The rising costs of healthcare and increasing complexity of managing disease require new approaches to comparative effectiveness research and real time management of disease. While there is much work to do, we have demonstrated a patient-centric approach that provides dramatic cost and time advantages.”

Nature Biotechnology has made the final publication, titled, “Accelerated clinical discovery using self-reported patient data collected online and a patient-matching algorithm,” available for free to the public on its website (DOI: 10.1038/nbt.1837).

(1) (Fornai et al., “Lithium delays progression of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.”
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2008 Feb 12;105(6):2052-7.)

About PatientsLikeMe

PatientsLikeMe® (www.patientslikeme.com) is the world’s leading online health data sharing platform. PatientsLikeMe® creates new knowledge by charting the real-world course of disease through the shared experiences of patients. While patients interact to help improve their outcomes, the data they provide helps researchers learn how these diseases act in the real world and accelerate the discovery of new, more effective treatments.

We are all aware of the power of social networking in numerous arenas, but this is taking it to a whole new level.  Smart businesses are now understanding the power of social networking.  I have participated in all kinds of surveys and focus groups but social networking provides an unfettered opinion from the people that are actually using products.  People write exactly what they are thinking without any consideration of what a company wants to hear.

Healthcare companies would be stupid not to take advantage of this free information.  Like they said in the press release, this is not a replacement for true clinical trials, but it does provide worthwhile supplementary data for people to consider.  As a regular person, the information from a clinical trial can be as easy to understand as a foreign language, but being able to read exactly what other people are saying can help you understand the information.  Why do you think company review sites are so successful?

April 27, 2011 I Written By