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Stanford MedX Autoimmune 2014-17 Presentations by DrBonnie360

We are here republishing our 2014-17 Stanford MedX autoimmune presentations, plus unpublished material from our 2015 Autoimmune Workshop. As we develop our 2023 State of Autoimmunity Report, we’ve been revisiting our previous analyses. For another example, see our 2016-19 patient-centered vision and business opportunities post. In 2015, Bonnie conducted an autoimmune patient survey (solicited via Facebook and Twitter; n=400), and presented those results at Stanford MedX 2015, where we also facilitated a workshop. We attracted 25 patients, providers and others to discuss pain points and brainstorm solutions. We heard many patient (and provider) journey stories. Participants offered ideas for fixing the broken system that impedes care for autoimmune. When we reviewed the output, we were struck by how relevant this work still is, despite significant progress in digital health in the past 7 years. So we publish more of this output here for the first time, consolidating it with our previously published work.

Some progress since 2015

Since 2015, digital health innovation has advanced. Organizations like the Digital Medicine Society (DiME) aid and promote digital health companies. Investors such as Takeda Digital Ventures, Redesign Health, Flare Capital Partners and others have been funding emerging companies delivering chronic care through virtual-first models. A few are even beginning to address the needs of autoimmune patients. However, until these ventures scale and influence wider clinical practice, the problems voiced by autoimmune patients in our 2015 Stanford MedX survey and workshop will persist. For more of our earlier voices of autoimmune patients see also our Invisible Suffering post on Medium.

Stanford MedX 2015 autoimmune survey predicted Long-COVID patient experience 

“Why is the research question framed [so] a low accuracy laboratory test is to be believed … more than patients’ testimonies about their own health? The burden of proof should not be on ill people every time that a study implies that Long COVID is imagined.”

Nature Reviews Immunology: Lessons from Long COVID: working with patients to design better research

In a distressing parallel, the Stanford MedX 2015 autoimmune patient complaints are much the same as complaints from Long-COVID (and fibromyalgia, ME/CFS/SEID) patients today. These continuing issues around access and misdiagnosis points to the need to focus research on long-neglected post-viral (and post-bacterial) infection syndromes. It also points to accumulating evidence that autoimmune processes underlie at least some Long-COVID, ME/CFS/SEID and fibromyalgia cases. Furthermore, it points to an ongoing care delivery barrier. This BMJ commentary calls it “‘structural iatrogenesis,’ where patients are harmed by power imbalances in the bureaucratic and cultural systems within medicine.” And this Nature Reviews Immunology comment admonishes researchers to learn from Long COVID to stop framing poorly-understood diseases as mental illness, as too many autoimmune patients have reported. This issue was also mentioned in the NIH May 2022 Autoimmune Report, which recommends launching a National Autoimmune Institute to coordinate research and (for the first time ever!) collect national US data on all autoimmune diseases. 

“Framing illnesses that we still lack sufficient knowledge about as ‘beliefs’ can be harmful…We have seen this happen with…ME/CFS, and …the medical research community [must] learn from these mistakes. Particularly for chronic conditions that are still poorly understood…”

Nature Reviews Immunology: Lessons from Long COVID: working with patients to design better research

Our Stanford MedX 2015 autoimmune survey & workshop participants identified key pain points for patients. We grouped these into 3 problem groups: Diagnosis Purgatory, Tower of Babel, No Root Causes. We presented selected survey results to workshop participants, who brainstormed around the three problem areas the survey identified. For a more detailed summary, see this Tincture post or the embedded .pdfs below.

1. Diagnosis Purgatory: Inefficient, lengthy, inaccurate

Problem: Diagnosis takes multiple years & physicians, missed & misdiagnosis is too common

Solution ideas:

2. Tower of Babel: Uncoordinated care

Problem: No coordination of complex chronic care across multiple providers

Solution ideas:

3. Root Causes: not pursued nor understood

Problem: systemic autoimmune disease obscured by body-part silos

Solution: Think of autoimmune disease as a systemic disorder, not just end-state tissue damage

Conclusion: More progress since our 2015 Stanford MedX autoimmune workshop driven by COVID

It’s true, if depressing, that it took the COVID-19 pandemic and lockdowns to change medical care delivery towards our vision. 

Digital health investors and entrepreneurs tackle autoimmune

Although individual autoimmune diseases are still treated by siloed specialists and patient-centered models are not yet standard of care, there has been progress. Most encouraging, investors like Takeda Digital Ventures, Redesign Health, Flare Capital Partners and others are funding new V1C delivery companies. 

Finally, funded before the pandemic, but even more relevant since, the May 2022 NIH report recommends collecting national autoimmune data for the first time ever and aggregating it, as cancer data has been for decades. It also proposes coordinating the 13 NIH research organizations under an umbrella National Autoimmune Institute, modeled after the National Cancer Institute (founded in 1937).  

Stay tuned for more details in our 2023 State of Autoimmunity Report!

Authors: DrBonnie360, Ellen M Martin & Emily Burns

We approach these thought leadership posts from our multi-lens perspectives

Strategic Consulting & Professional Services 

We provide professional consulting services to investment, emerging and established companies. Our work bridges silos and fills gaps to help our clients improve healthcare and reduce costs for patients with autoimmune and chronic inflammatory disorders. Informed by patient and caretaker perspectives, we integrate the best of digital, conventional and functional approaches.

Contact us for help understanding the market landscape and patient unmet needs, as well as clarifying and articulating your company’s market position and strategy. Long before COVID-19, we were facilitating virtual sessions. We create compelling content: articles, blog posts, collateral, e-books, web copy and white papers. Our Autoimmune Connect/DrBonnie360 website showcases our own content.

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