(I rarely do a list post, but could not help myself today (blame it on my daily reading of @Cracked…)
I often attend medical conferences and hear about the best practices applied within medicine, but I rarely hear about best practices applied to the medical conference itself. In a world of often shrinking budgets and limited bandwidth, we must choose carefully which conferences we should attend. Embracing some of the suggestions below can make an event a must attend inspirational and renewing moment in our lives and careers.
1. The standing table, lounging chair and the walking meeting
I recently returned from a wonderful roundtable discussion on clinical trials in Indianapolis. We had great conversations about open data and patient participation. The only bad part of the meeting was the back pain I began to suffer after sitting for a few hours. I am among the ever-growing group of people who work at standing desks. So staying seated is a special kind of agony. Fortunately, I am also without a modicum of decorum and had access to my huge suitcase, so I made a standing table MacGyver style during the meeting.
Some conferences already provide standing tables around the back of the room and I say kudos to you! Health 2.0 is one, but if you know of others please give them a shout out in the comments section.
On the flip side of the coin of attendee comfort is the lounging couch. As we invite more and more patients to medical conferences it behooves us to remember, many attendees are listening while in pain. I applaud the all the conferences that offer a cool down or comfort room where attendees can recline. But sadly, such rooms rarely have access to the content feed of the live sessions that are ongoing. Medicine X is the first conference I have attended that offered lounging couches to any who needed to rest while taking part in the live event. It was rather epic to see that level of inclusion.
Another great addition to the conference venue is the walking meeting. My friend Ted Eytan, MD introduced me to this gem. Don't feel your conference has to be contained within four walls. Go "on the lam" in a official capacity and have some of your breakout sessions outside while walking. It is incredibly refreshing!
Another great addition to the conference venue is the walking meeting. My friend Ted Eytan, MD introduced me to this gem. Don't feel your conference has to be contained within four walls. Go "on the lam" in a official capacity and have some of your breakout sessions outside while walking. It is incredibly refreshing!
2. Inviting e-Patient Scholars and Patient Advocates
The ePatient movement is really expanding. More and more patients are taking a hand in their own medical futures and helping shape health policy. Their questions during Q&A sessions often change the direction of the conversation of the conference itself. Their keynotes and panel speeches help other attendees to express their own personal health stories. Many of these patients and advocates have very strong social media profiles and their live-tweeting of events has exposed conference conversations to the wider world. Look no further than Medicine X to see the enormous potential of e-Patients to spread the content of a conference.
“But where do I find such e-Patients?” I often hear in response. Well @speakerlink is a great place to start looking for potential attendees and speakers. Another avenue is participation in online discussion groups on Facebook, twitter and LinkedIn. The future in medicine is "Patients Included."
3. You must list your #hashtag on Symplur

It is a win/win situation. Now all those ePatients can tweet and spread the conversation and you have proof of the level of spread. You just have to focus on how to fund those e-Patient Scholars.
4. Crowdfunding at the Medical Conference

But the power of crowdfunding attendance to enable participation in continuing medical education is not limited to conference organizers. E-Patient scholars and patient advocates should consider this route to cover their participation expenses in health conferences and classes that do not offer sufficient scholarship options. A proof of concept is our dear friend @AfternoonNapper who has done so much for the role of the patient in the world of medicine.
5. Traitwise surveys are the way to go.
So how many of you look at that after-conference response survey in your email in box and whoop with joy? I bet very few of you do, unless it is a @Traitwisesurvey. Not only does Traitwise have a pleasing graphic interface and font selection not reminiscent of the early 1990’s, their surveys are fun. They keep you in the loop and informed on how your response fits into the greater data set of the conference. And after you complete your conference survey, you can keep going, filling out survey after survey for the good of mankind. One of my fellow e-Patients did exactly that after the Partnership with Patients conference. They broke the record for most answers in one session with over a thousand. (Another reason you should invite e-Patients: We are very giving people.)
6. Teach attendees how to live-tweet

Nowadays Twitter is that forum, for artists and everyone else.
If you are running a medical conference for the good of your attendees and the wider world of medicine, you have several goals. You want to break even. You want people to have an enjoyable time. But most of all, you want people to walk away inspired to make this world a better place. In healthcare, many individuals feel they do not have a voice in policy discussions. I am not just talking patients here. I have spoken to a great many doctors and nurses who feel like they have worked to make a better system for 20 years without sufficient progress. They are discouraged and feel alone. I challenge all of you conference planners to get them live-tweeting, to help them realize there are hundreds, even thousands who think as they do.
I have attended two conferences wherein the conference planners designed an entire webinar around teaching attendees how to live-tweet. One of these events offered a webinar and 1-800 number support to walk attendees through the entire process. The conference organizer
offered raffle items at the event that attendees who live-tweeted were eligible to win. So many new twitter voices joined a wider conversation due the efforts of one conference planner. Do you want your conference to live beyond the after-conference survey? Do want your attendees to act upon the content they absorbed? Then help them tweet; help them discover the voice they always had.
Remember, online the Q&A never has to end and the microphone is accessible to everyone.