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Posted by Kip on 2nd Jul 2014
No one but Al Gore uses the term “World Wide Web” anymore, given the ubtiuqiy of the channel — and for similar reasons as you point out, Alex, the term “mobile” has rapidly become equally antiquated. In principle the trouble with qualifying a digital experience, or any experience, for that matter, with a channel designation is you detract from the essence, which never deviates from engendering favorable behavioral change through engagement.So I agree wholeheartedly with your assertion that “e-patient” suffers from these same limitations. Worse still, the moniker is not only redundant, but creates a mythical subset of patients who are somehow qualitatively different in how they connect with, consume, and respond to content. The truth, as you cite through the eye-popping statistics, is that patients are already “e,” and inattentive marketers are the only ones using this already antiquated term.But all this elicits the challenge of somehow describing and differentiating the “evolved patient,” and by that I mean the patients of today who routinely embrace and engage with emerging technologies. If “e-patient” is admittedly superfluous and misleading, then should we nonetheless create a new descriptor to capture the transformative reality that patients have become active participants in their healthcare?Along these lines, a brief foray into etymology might guide us: According to Wikipedia, “the word patient originally meant ‘one who suffers’. This English noun comes from the Latin word patiens, the present participle of the deponent verb, patior, meaning ‘I am suffering,’ and akin to the Greek verb πάσχειν (= paskhein, to suffer) and its cognate noun πάθος (= pathos).”Interesting! So what about going all the way with your idea, Alex, and rekindling the very word “Patient”? Can we move from ‘I am suffering’ to ‘I am healing’? Throwing that into Google Translator we get: Είμαι επούλωση. Phonetically that is close to “Eίmai epoύlwsh” (I think). So what about changing “patient” to “epol” — Ironically enough retaining the “e”! To an extent I’m kidding, but the trajectory takes your idea to its logical conclusion.Great post, Alex. Brings up some fundamental issues regarding how we define the patient, and how we characterize their expanding and progressively more innate interactions with technology. The play is the thing as the Bard said, while God gave power over animals to Noah through naming; often we need to redefine and recreate our basic terms to truly capture the essence of a new way of thinking and feeling.SPITZ
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