Category: Thought Leadership

Five Facts About Healthcare

Our healthcare system is a scary place. It can make you feel lost, small, and overwhelmed. There are so many different phrases to learn, acronyms to remember, and Latin words to trip us up. Making sense of the chaos quite literally takes a medical degree. But let’s be clear, most doctors don’t believe in the system as it exists today.

Six Ideas You Should Steal From Patient Advocates

Patient advocates have been around for a long time. A patient advocate develops an understanding of what is important to do to make your doctor’s visits the best they can be. At Your Vesa, we do nothing but research how to make the most out of your time with your doctor. In our research, we’ve…
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The 13 Best Resources for Patient Advocacy

We spend a lot of time reading about our favourite topic, patient advocacy. The internet is full of so many wonderful resources from so many amazing foundations and associations.

Who Owns Your Medical Records Anyway?

A few decades ago, it was common that only a provider maintains and stores the medical records of a patient. Nowadays, under the regulations introduced in HIPPA (Health Insurance Portability and Accounting Act) in 1996, it is not the case. It now makes you, the patient, capable of accessing your medical records, receiving copies of…
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Ten Podcasts to Help Learn About Patient Advocacy

Whether you’re already the type of person who wants to know everything about your health, has an advocate, is an advocate, or is just starting out thinking about patient advocacy, we think podcasts are a great place to start. 

Every Patient Deserves an Advocate

For many patients, hospitals should feel like safe havens with caring physicians, compassionate nurses, and experienced professionals who would take good care of those in need. Yet, this is only the perfect scenario, while in reality, it is very different; one might say it’s even more complicated.

How to Use Your Own Medical Records Effectively

It goes without a saying that patients should have access to their medical records. At the same time, offering patients access just for the sake of it without teaching how to use them, serves no purpose.