One of the highlights was getting the honor of introducing the KDIGO Mobile app. This iPad only app contains all of the KDIGO guidelines and support documents. The Chair of the implementation committee, Yusuke Tsukamoto, described me as KDIGO's Steve Jobs. I can't imagine a higher compliment.
Just got my hair cut. Asked for the full Steve Jobs. What do ya think? http://t.co/DT45QxOa
— Joel Topf (@kidney_boy) September 16, 2011
The app is a great way to read the guidelines. We feel these are our first steps and we are excited to push the app forward. You can download it for free from the iPad App Store. Getting a chance to work with the KDIGO folks on this project has literally been one of the highlights of my career.
I aggressively live tweeted every session I attended. This is a huge 180° U-turn for me. See this post from last August where I blast the entire practice. Hobgoblin of little minds and all. Well all that tweeting resulted in me being the largest influencer of Kidney Week 2013.
That will be the only time I will ever be listed ahead of the New England Journal of Medicine. |
Impressions is number of tweets times number of followers. Mentions is the number of tweets where an individual is mentioned along with the hashtag #KidneyWk13. To me this is the most important metric, since it indicates tweets that are generating interactions, through retweets and replies.
Pushing the twitter at #kidneywk13 pic.twitter.com/BWNoNKeMdR
— Joel Topf (@kidney_boy) November 6, 2013
The summary statistics show increasing twitter use at the meeting. Here are 2013's numbers compared to 2011 and 2012:
Tweets and participants are rising.
I also did a fair amount of blogging:
And I was invited to present my NephMadness abstract during an oral presentation. What an honor. I don't have any photos but I did a screen cast of the presentation:
Nephmadness Unplugged is available here.
Nephmadness Unplugged is available here.