HealthCare NarrativeTracker Index

Healthcare NTI™ (NarrativeTracker Index™) is the first social media tracking tool designed to monitor public opinions on healthcare. Because the Healthcare NTI is based on the national (or regional or, even local) discourse – in real time, it provides a more accurate picture of what the public is actually thinking, on any topic, at any point in time.

Learn How Healthcare NarrativeTracker Works…Download the PDF


News Releases

Sept. 28, 2010
Healthcare Reform Effort Falters as NarrativeTracker Projected
Dallas and Austin, TX Sept. 28, 2010 – Social Media and Internet Analysis Presage Future Directions in Healthcare Reform   Read more
August 17, 2010
Concern about Keeping One’s Insurance and Rising Healthcare Costs Soar According to Healthcare NarrativeTracker™
Dallas and Austin, TX August 17, 2010 – Social Media and Internet Citations More than Double in 90 Days   Read more

July 7, 2010
Healthcare NarrativeTracker Detects Growing Concern about Containing Costs
Dallas and Austin, TX July 7, 2010 – The Healthcare Narrative Tracker™ has detected a growing wave of concern throughout the nation about containing rising Healthcare costs. 
May 13, 2010
NarrativeTracker Provides Unbiased Public Opinion on Healthcare
In what could presage mounting difficulties for the national healthcare reform roll-out, the top buzzwords associated with the Massachusetts Healthcare Reform ‘narrative’ have been found to be Rationing, Out-of-Control-Spending, Price Controls, Non-sustainable, and Mandate Failure. Read More
May 12, 2010
OpenConnect announces first social media tracking tool to monitor public opinions on healthcare
Today, OpenConnect, an innovator in defining and improving process efficiency, and the Global Language Monitor (GLM), the media analytics company, announced the joint launch of the Healthcare NarrativeTracker Index™ (NTI™), the first product specifically designed to use social media-based monitoring to better understand the issues driving healthcare reform. Read More


For More Information Contact:
Paul JJ Payack
pjjp@post.Harvard.edu
925-367-7557