Resources

 

 

 

2025 Backstage Pass Website

Webinars

Like our conference, these digital marketing webinars and case studies were created to educate leaders in the healthcare industry on emerging Internet technologies and to provide an environment in which healthcare marketers, Web leaders, IT professionals and strategists can learn from the other attendees and presenters.

 

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The Healthcare Internet Conference (HCIC) is proud to collaborate with Bowstring and Touch Point Media to provide exclusive insights from some of the brightest minds among our speakers and attendees.

Stay connected by tuning into the latest broadcasts, where strategic leaders share their perspectives on emerging trends and pressing challenges in the healthcare industry. Together, we’ll delve into groundbreaking innovations and pivotal policy updates shaping the future of healthcare.

Catch the audio-only episodes on Touch Point Media, available on your favorite podcast streaming platforms.

 

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The Latest Hospital Digital Marketing Articles

 GreyMatters is your hospital digital marketing guide, with articles on hospital digital marketing best practices, trends, updates and more.

Why “Go Red for Women”?

Those of us involved in healthcare marketing are very aware that February is Heart Month, and that today is Go Red for Women Day. Every year we plan various heart-related campaigns for our heart services. But seriously – what’s the big deal about women and wearing red?

Please allow me to veer from our usual type of blog to offer an explanation. But first, a little backstory: Although I have worked with Greystone in different capacities over the years – currently serving as Director of Content Services – I have been a registered nurse for over 30 years. Before getting involved in writing and editing for health content and marketing, I spent many years as a critical-care nurse in the cardiac surgery ICU of a major academic medical center. Cardiac surgery is my first clinical love.

In the academic medical center setting, I was very fortunate to be associated with many clinicians involved in heart-related research and practice. One of those researchers and practitioners is Dr. Nanette Wenger. Dr. Wenger is known nationally and internationally for her work in cardiology, specifically for her focus on women and heart disease. Dr. Wenger was researching and lecturing on women’s heart disease long before the rest of the medical world caught on.

Thanks to Dr. Wenger’s efforts, along with those of many others, we’ve learned a lot about heart disease in general and how it affects women in particular. Women have been more involved in research as study participants, which has led to improved treatment guidelines and programs for women affected by heart disease.

So what’s different with women and heart disease? It wasn’t until early in this century that we officially realized that heart disease isn’t just specific to older men. Women get heart disease, as do men, and they die from it…in significant numbers. According to the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, 25% of US women die of heart disease – in fact, it’s the number one cause of death in American women. However, women often have different symptoms and disease presentation than men, and for this reason, they may not be as readily diagnosed with heart disease as men. Also, heart disease tends to strike women later in life than men.

So, as you participate in #GoRedWearRed today, know that if your efforts cause even one woman to recognize her risks for heart disease and take steps to improve her health, we’ve all won. And if dozens and hundreds and thousands of women are impacted, we’ve all won big time.

What is your organization doing for Go Red for Women today?

Coming Soon!