Biography
Maria Hägglund is an Associate Professor in Health Informatics at Uppsala MedTech Science and Innovation, Uppsala University, Sweden. She has a PhD in Medical Informatics and worked at Karolinska Institutet 2009-2019 before returning home to Uppsala.
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What I write about
- #blogg100
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- teaching
- Usability
- User-centered design
- Vitalis
- Work environment
- World Usability Day
Tag Archives: eHealth
Workshop at Vitalis
Speaking of Vitalis, I’m also organizing a workshop together with Johan Eltes, CTO at Inera. We will engage in an active discussion on how the current eHealth infrastructure can be used to facilitate implementation and spreading of eHealth nationally. If … Continue reading
Posted in Conference reflections, Health Informatics conferences
Tagged #blogg100, conferences, eHealth
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World leading by 2025 – a new Swedish eHealth vision!
År 2025 ska Sverige vara bäst i världen på att använda digitaliseringens och e-hälsans möjligheter i syfte att underlätta för människor att uppnå en god och jämlik hälsa och välfärd samt utveckla och stärka egna resurser för ökad självständighet och … Continue reading
How has smart patients helped you?
This blog post will be both personal and professional. Perhaps mostly personal, but since this is also my field of research I can’t help but reflect. But let’s start with the personal. A few days before christmas, my dad started … Continue reading
Posted in #blogg100, Consumer Health Informatics, Patient experience
Tagged #blogg100, cancer, eHealth, Kidney cancer, Patient empowerment, Smart Patients
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Patient Engagement Framework from the National eHealth Collaborative
The Patient Engagement Framework is a model created by the National eHealth Collaborative (NeHC) to guide healthcare organizations in developing and strengthening their patient engagement strategies through the use of eHealth tools and resources. The framework describes patient engagement as different stages; (1) … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged eHealth, Patient empowerment, Patient engagement, Patient participation
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