When I was little, learning to count, ‘I’ was represented by
lots of numbers; two eyes, ten fingers, one nose and so on. As an adult I recognize that 'I' am made up of thousands of numbers. While I believe that my whole is
greater than the sum of my parts I do not discount the tremendous value
in understanding and quantifying those parts. But, my ability to measure is limited by my ability to access my personal
data in a usable form.
The Quantified Self is a movement to incorporate technology
into data acquisition on aspects of a person's daily life in terms of inputs
(e.g. food consumed, quality of surrounding air), states (e.g. mood, arousal,
blood oxygen levels), and performance (mental and physical). There are devices and tools available to help
us measure just about everything we do.
Nike+ is a great example of how devices can be used individually and
contributes collectively. I joined up
online out of curiosity and all of my runs are added to the online calculator that
keeps a tally of the ‘Nike community’ steps, calories and Nikefuel (Nike's way
of selling more devices). Think of how
informative it would be if individuals shared their health data in the same anonymous
way.
This week I encountered John Wilbanks on TED talks John
Wilbanks: Let's Pool Our Medical Data and online at the Strata Rx
Conference – Data Makes a Difference John
Wilbanks: Choose Your Monopolies Wisely, and I was inspired by his belief
in pooling medical data. He goes beyond
self interest in accessing data and believes that our data should be pooled (anonymously)
to help find answers to our health challenges.
Wilbanks believes our health is the interaction of our
bodies, our genomes, our environment and our choices and we can access data on
all of these components to help us make informed decisions and be partners in
the future of our health. For those
familiar with population health and the determinants
of health you will be encouraged by his inclusion of so many measurable
factors that impact the health of each and every one of us. You will be nodding your head in
encouragement as you listen to Wilbanks because you too recognize that improvements
in health and health systems will not be found by keeping data in silos, but by
looking holistically at all the factors that influence health. Accessing and sharing that information is the
first step.
It’s your health. It’s
your health information. Manage it well.
Just getting into quantifiable self myself and like reading how it has affected others mostly for the positive. With the advent of smart phones it really is becoming easier for anyone to do QS themselves
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