Healthcare Can Learn From Chess

By KIM BELLARD Oh, gosh, two of my favorite things are in the news together: Twitch and chess.  Just kidding.  I barely know what Twitch is, and the last time I played chess was, well, not in this century (and, even then, not well).  But I’m not kidding about their convergence.  Chess has become a big hit on Twitch, especially in these COVID times.  I figure, if two such seemingly divergent things are meshing, there must be some lessons there, even for healthcare.  For those of you over, say, fifty, Twitch is an online service that facilitates livestreaming, particularly of gaming.  That is, people watch other people playing games, such Fortnite or League of Legends.  E-sports, as this is known, have become a big thing; colleges are even giving out scholarships for e-sports.   Major news outlets, such as The New York Times and The Washington Post, reported on Twitch re-signing video game star Tyler Blevins, a.k.a “Ninja,” much as they might have reported an NFL team signing a star player.  As I write, 2.7 million people are livingstreaming on Twitch.  Its all-time concurrent viewers peak is just over 6 million.  There were 1.6 billion hours watched in August, with over 11 billion year-to-date.  It draws more viewers than network television hits. There are 93,000 live channels at this moment.  Some of those livestreams are watching chess.  Analytics website Sullygnome reports...
Source: The Health Care Blog - Category: Consumer Health News Authors: Tags: Health Tech chess Kim Bellard Twitch Source Type: blogs