Private practice with Dr Seth Bilazarian

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Twitter: What role for the community-based cardiologist?

May 28, 2012 11:25 EDT


The group-driven, sometimes self-promotional, and often disorganized nature of Twitter keeps many cardiologists at bay, but microblogging can be educational and entertaining—even for the busy physician. Find out how to start, how to build a social-media presence, and what's in it for you.

To download Dr Seth Bilazarian's presentation, click here.

See also:

Cardiologists are happy(ish), married non-tweeters, survey reveals








Your comments
Twitter: What role for the community-based cardiologist?
# 1 of 2
May 29, 2012 01:19 (EDT)
Dr. John Vyselaar
I love Twitter.  I follow sites like theheart.org and interesting doctors like Dr. Bilazarian and by reviewing it a few times a  day, get all the major headlines, late-breaking trials etc.  I have other doctors follow me, and patients too - I retweet topics that interest me and occasionally post my own opinions.  It is an informal and easy way to keep on top of topics that interest you. I agree with Dr. B's podcast - Twitter is great!
# 2 of 2
May 29, 2012 07:59 (EDT)
DrSethdb

John,  I agree that Twitter definitely has an immediate "ROI" for time spent of all the social media I have spent time exploring.  I have become an enthusiast and suceeding at "converting" colleagues to its utility and they are now regular users like you. thanks for posting. 


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About Dr Seth Bilazarian
Seth Bilazarian MD has been a Clinical and Interventional Cardiologist at Pentucket Medical Associates in Massachusetts since 1993. He is board certified in Internal Medicine, Cardiovascular Medicine, Nuclear Cardiology, Vascular Ultrasound, Interventional Cardiology, and Vascular and Endovascular Medicine.

Dr Bilazarian performs coronary and peripheral interventions at Lahey Clinic and Massachusetts General Hospital. He has been an investigator in the interventional laboratory for new devices including drug-eluting stents, distal protection devices, imaging devices (OCT and InfraRed), and anticoagulant pharmacotherapy.

Dr Bilazarian is an active participant in clinical trials in congestive heart failure, hypertension, coronary disease prevention, prediabetes management, anemia, atrial fibrillation, and anticoagulation/antiplatelet therapies in the outpatient setting. He has authored numerous papers and book chapters in clinical cardiology. He was appointed as a physician advisor to the circulatory device panel of the FDA in 2008.
About this blog
My intent is to create a forum for dialogue on issues pertinent to private practice cardiology around topics such as:

  • Integration of new data and guidelines on inpatient and outpatient practice in clinical and interventional cardiology
  • Practice approaches to the extra clinical issues in dealing with managed care insurers
  • Strategies for navigating the restrictions of pharmacy benefits managers (PBMs) on pharmacologic therapies for our patients
  • Experiences with restrictions on testing and imaging
The video blog (VLOG) will provide an opportunity to share broadly different approaches to the common conundrums we face in caring for patients. My hope is that this forum will provide useful data points for practice outside of tertiary and academic centers and a look inside community hospitals and physician?s practice patterns in the office, starting with mine.