dimarts, 6 de desembre del 2011

8 Uses For QR Codes In Healthcare Marketing | Well Done Marketing

8 Uses For QR Codes In Healthcare Marketing | Well Done Marketing: "8 USES FOR QR CODES IN HEALTHCARE MARKETING
POSTED ON JULY 5, 2011 BY KEN HONEYWELL



Eight months ago, we proposed using them on an ad, and our client had never seen one before. Today, you’re seeing them all over the place–those square Space Invader-looking boxes on ads and postcards and real estate signs and business cards. They’re called QR codes, and we imagine you’re going to be seeing a lot more of them until the next wave of technology brings something slicker to replace them.


QR stands for “quick response,” and that’s what these little boxes are all about. In essence, they’re bar codes that can be read with any mobile phone that has a QR code reader (which are free apps). Instead of requiring you to surf to a website or dial a phone number, the QR code connects you automatically. Just point your smartphone at a QR code, and you’re connected.
For example, if we wanted to show you some out-takes from an old TV session with Peyton Manning and Bill Estes, all you’d have to do is scan this code:
and you’d be enjoying all the hilarity without having to type a URL (http://www.welldonemarketing.com/2009/11/06/bill-estespeyton-manning-tvouttakes/) into your browser. Pretty slick, eh?
QR codes are free and easy to generate with any number of web-based programs. I used delivr to create the code above. It took less than a minute to copy the URL, find a generator, and create the code.
So how can you use QR codes in healthcare marketing? Let us count the ways.
1. Phone numbers. QR codes don’t have to connect with web addresses. They can also be linked with phone numbers, contact information, email addresses, and texts. A QR code can help you make an instant connection, without asking a prospective patient to remember or type a phone number.
2. Physician profiles. Want to give patients more information about your practice than can be contained in an ad? Link them to an online profile of your practice. Better yet, link them with a video of you telling them about yourself. This way, patients get to experience some of your personality and decide whether you’re the sort of doctor they’d like to see in person.

"A free first aid kit? Sign me up immediately."
3. Special promotions. Do you have a free or low-cost health screening offer? Are you hosting seminars? Offering a gift in exchange for an email address? Connect directly with your Internet-based sign-up forms with a QR code.
4. Procedure and equipment videos. Patients want to know what they’re getting into before they agree to a procedure. Don’t just show them a picture of a new piece of high-tech equipment–show them how it works with a web video linked to a QR code. It turns a static ad into a multimedia experience.
5. Maps. Your QR code can link to a Google map–so your patients don’t have to type your address into a browser to find you.
6. Health tips. Link QR codes to microsites, blogs, videos, podcasts, and other Internet-based health information. Patients won’t have to search for the timely advice they need–they can just point their smartphones at your QR code and connect immediately.
7. Post-procedure instructions. A QR code can link patients with online documents that provide instructions on how to care for themselves after a procedure, physical therapy videos, and more.
8. Physician-to-physician communications. There’s no reason to use QR codes only for patient communications: docs use smartphones, too. You can use QR codes to provide contact information for referrals, show videos of procedures, and profile your practice.
I’m sure I’ve only scratched the surface here. But you get the idea. Within a handful of years, more people will access the Internet via mobile device than with a desktop or laptop computer. Making things easier for the mobile patient should be a priority now, and will only become more important in the years ahead.
And that’s the thing to remember about QR codes. They’re not magic. They shouldn’t replace your phone number and your address in your print ads. They’re not going to attract a lot more people to your website; in fact, we haven’t seen much overall increase in web traffic since we started using them. QR codes are merely a convenience for people with smartphones; if they were going to your site, anyway, the QR code makes it easier. And when people are on the go, especially in a marketplace as competitive as health care, easier is better.


Read more: http://www.welldonemarketing.com/2011/07/05/8-uses-for-qr-codes-in-healthcare-marketing/#ixzz1fldTtsEL


seguimos con los QR

Proyecto SPQR | Grupo de Nuevas Tecnologías de la SoMaMFyC


SPQR es una aplicación gratuita que surge de la colaboración entre la Fundación Orange y BJ Adaptaciones.


Se trata de un sistema simplificado de acceso a la información que utiliza los códigos QR para ayudar en la interacción con el entorno de las personas con diversidad funcional."
Colocando etiquetas de códigos QR en el entorno del usuario, este sistema puede facilitar el reconocimiento de objetos, la enseñanza de la generalización y de lectoescritura, constituir un acceso simplificado a la información, potenciar la automomía y comunicación, faciltar la adaptación del puesto de trabajo, etc.
Particularmente, el proyecto se ha testeado en distintas asociaciones de usuarios con los siguientes colectivos: personas con trastornos del espectro del autismo (TEA), personas con discapacidad auditiva y personas mayores.
  • Las personas con TEA pueden beneficiarse de este proyecto como un sistema de comunicación alternativa y aumentativa y como una especie de brújula para descifrar acciones, situaciones u objetos que componen su realidad cotidiana. En particular, la Asociación APRENEM para la inclusión de las personas con TEA ha participado en el proyecto y ha generado contenido en este sentido.
  • El colectivo de personas con discapacidad auditiva puede asociar códigos QR a información escrita y/o en Lengua de Signos. El Centro Recreativo Cultural de Sordos de Barcelona (CERECUSOR) ha creado contenidos en esta línea.
  • Las personas mayores, especialmente personas con Alzheimer u otras demencias en fases tempranas, pueden utilizar este sistema para acceder a información que les oriente en su realidad cotidiana. El Centro Tecnológico Comunitario de Masquefa(dedicado a personas mayores) se ha encargado de elaborar contenido especialmente diseñado para los mayores.
  • Otras personas pueden beneficiarse del proyecto, como las personas con discapacidad intelectual, las personas con pérdida progresiva de visión, etc.
Mucha más información en la página web del proyecto