Bertalan Mesko, MD, PhD is a medical futurist who graduated from the University of Debrecen Medical School and Health Science Center. He received the Weszprmy Award as a medical doctor and finished his PhD summa cum laude in the field of clinical genomics.
As a medical futurist, he envisions the next steps to be taken and the trends happening now in order to have a mutually positive relationship between the human touch and the innovative technologies that await us in the future of healthcare.
Dr. Mesko is the managing director and founder of Webicina.com, the first service that curates medical and healthrelated social media resources for patients and medical professionals. He has given over 500 presentations at institutions ranging from Yale, Stanford, and Harvard to the
World Health Organization and the Futuremed course organized by the Singularity University. He is also a consultant for pharma and medical technology companies.
He is the author of the Social Media in Clinical Practice handbook, as well as the multiple awardwinning medical blog, Scienceroll.com. He is the founder of and lecturer at the Social Media in Medicine onlineandoffline university course, which is the first of its kind worldwide.
Dr. Meskos work has been cited by CNN, the World Health Organization, Nature Medicine, The New York Times, Al Jazeera, the British Medical Journal, and Wired Science, among others.
He is a member of the World Future Society.
Foreword by Lucien Engelen
In fifty years from now, I expect more than 50% of the revenue in healthcare will come from companies that do not exist, or do not have any business in healthcare today.
Technological developments as well as changes in society will create the 5th democratization. After music, travel, retail and media; healthcare is next to be disrupted. Adding to that, the increasing patient empowerment brings in the perfect storm for health(care). In my keynotes I often use the 4D anagram: Delocalization, Digitalization, Dollars and Democratization. Because they are all tied together and starting to peak at somewhat the same time, it creates the ideal ecosystem for autonomous change.
Change that will hit health(care) for a lot of people overnight, not that this wasnt foreseeable, but the signs have been neglected over and over again. Medicine is starting to adopt new treatments, medications and protocols but is lacking far behind where it goes on reflecting on the model of health(care). We basically deliver healthcare the same way it was done a hundred years ago. Now due to the exponentially growing possibilities technology is bringing to the table, we, for instance, will start bringing back health(care) into the homes of people. This also brings the need of new payment models, changes in curriculum for medical students like the one that weve crafted at Radboud University Medical Center, or even new legislation.
For these kinds of transformational processes, we need people who can address these changes and paint a picture of the world of tomorrow. In my work of changing healthcare through innovations, conferences (TEDxMaastricht 2011, 2012) and lectures, I sometimes meet people who have the ability to bridge the world of medicine and the one of technology on a high and, most of all, broad level. One of those was a young medical student who was running
a medical blog (Scienceroll), at that time already the best read blog in this area. Sharing the same vision with a different approach we got connected through the Internet in 2009 and I asked him to speak at our REshape conferences in Nijmegen.
Berci is one of the few people who have the insight, the feeling, the expertise, the tone of voice and the network to guide medicine through this era of change. Hes crafted himself a way through huge challenges, carefully choosing his options, staying authentic to changing medicine. Being faculty at Singularitys University in the Exponential Medicine track (formerly known as FutureMed),
I asked Daniel Kraft who is running the track, if I could donate half of my lecture time to Berci in 2013. What better place than NASAs Moffet Field campus to show this guys great competence that equals the levels most of us have at the end of our career; and as expected he absolutely rocked the place. Over time, his opening sentence in his keynotes changed from Im a medical geek to Im a medical futurist and that is spoton. The question only was how and when he would set the next step. His latest endeavor is the book you are holding right now.
An exciting journey and guide through developments, paradigm shifts, hurdles and opportunities. Although the model of writing a book might become obsolete in the future, it nowadays still is a great form factor to spread knowledge. This book should be added to every curriculums mandatory reading list in the medical as in the nursing field, but also to every Health MBA program out there. Im also looking forward to the online course version of this book that he hopefully will create.
In here youll find a lot of very interesting topics assembled into one place to guide you through your own journey. Since that is Bercis biggest suggestion to you: start NOW exploring the world around you from an innovation perspective, find your own way, and choose your own battle.
My prescription to you would be to read a chapter a day, digest it for another day, explore that area yourself for the day after, and then execute on it the next. But the chances youll read this book in one take are actually much higher, and thats fine too.
Next to this incredibly well written and overarching book, hes also created a virtual landing space for the discussion on www.medicalfuturist.com .
I really do hope to meet you there.
To Berci: congratulations my friend, youve done it again! You never stop amazing me and many others with the thorough steps you take. I would like to advise you with an adapted quote of the great Steve Jobs keep the courage to follow your heart and intuition Stay hungry, and be a bit more foolish sometimes