10 Tech Trends in
Healthcare
@ValaAfshar
@bobzemke, @carey_mercier
Smart
PHONES
The iPhone has been a catalyst
and the lead smartphone
adopted in healthcare.
W
It was a wakeup call that
small form factor devices
could become so widely
adopted in clinical care.
Wi-Fi
Application development leverages
smartphone hardware – cameras,
accelerometers, and Bluetooth.
Wi-Fi
There are high
expectations for the
enterprise environment
to be available on a
mobile platform.
Wi-Fi
Wi-Fi
ADOPTION
For many hospitals the WLAN now has more
connected devices than the wired LAN.
It started with workstations on wheels – but
now encompasses guest Internet access, medical
devices, phones, video units, RTLS, and on and on.
Since Wi-Fi availability is
expected, medical devices are
getting smarter where Wi-Fi
connectivity is a requirement.
Bring Your Own
DEVICE
Smartphones + Hospital Wi-Fi = need for a BYOD
policy and mobile device management solution.
+ =
BYOD has been the
disrupter to how technology
solutions are evaluated and
roll out by hospital IT.
A revolution took place
and it is forcing IT to
focus more on customer
service delivery rather
than technology control.
We are moving towards
a cloud infrastructure
supporting a range of devices
dictated by the consumer.
Government
Mandates
HITECH, HIPAA, Meaningful Use, and ICD 10 have
forced healthcare institutions to invest heavily in
IT infrastructure, talent, and application systems.
These mandates
have the potential
for being the catalyst
to big data analysis.
Voice over
Ip
The emergence of VoIP has allowed
healthcare institutions to leverage
the same IT infrastructure
backbone to support data,
and voice traffic.
More importantly it has created communication
flexibility that started with mobility and is now
evolving into applications.
Social Media
Platforms
Emergence of social media is allowing hospitals to
reach out to staff, patients, and the general public
in new ways, and to reach younger audiences.
Next we will see social
evolve into flexible
communications options for
hospitals and care teams.
Virtualization
Virtualization is increasing
the consolidation of services
onto dedicated server
farms and a high level of
availability, and redundancy.
IAAS and PAAS are
emerging and soon we may
even see virtual cloud and
virtual storage on the rise.
IP–Based Medical
Devices
Medical devices are evolving
at an unprecedented rate, so
much so that the 510K process
is in dire need of an update in
order to ensure that medical
devices can use the latest in
technological advancements.
As these devices become
more integrated into the
network, human error is
becoming increasingly
contained which ultimately
decreases re-admission rates.
The network infrastructure
and backbone must be agile
enough to accommodate
the explosive growth of
connected devices and
network traffic as we move
towards an era where every
device is communicating
on the network.
mHealth
mHealth facilitates a spectrum of ways to leverage
mobility, and mobile devices to improve clinical
work flows and outcomes.
These range from video remote interpretation,
to telemedicine and remote care use cases.
The next step will be adoption
of wearable technologies.
Big
Data
The infrastructure and applications everyone
investing in holds the promise of being leveraged
for big data analysis, trending, more insight for
improved clinical results.
Our challenge is how to
share the information while
protecting patient privacy.

10 Tech Trends in Healthcare

  • 1.
    10 Tech Trendsin Healthcare @ValaAfshar @bobzemke, @carey_mercier
  • 2.
  • 3.
    The iPhone hasbeen a catalyst and the lead smartphone adopted in healthcare. W
  • 4.
    It was awakeup call that small form factor devices could become so widely adopted in clinical care. Wi-Fi
  • 5.
    Application development leverages smartphonehardware – cameras, accelerometers, and Bluetooth. Wi-Fi
  • 6.
    There are high expectationsfor the enterprise environment to be available on a mobile platform. Wi-Fi
  • 7.
  • 8.
    For many hospitalsthe WLAN now has more connected devices than the wired LAN.
  • 9.
    It started withworkstations on wheels – but now encompasses guest Internet access, medical devices, phones, video units, RTLS, and on and on.
  • 10.
    Since Wi-Fi availabilityis expected, medical devices are getting smarter where Wi-Fi connectivity is a requirement.
  • 11.
  • 12.
    Smartphones + HospitalWi-Fi = need for a BYOD policy and mobile device management solution. + =
  • 13.
    BYOD has beenthe disrupter to how technology solutions are evaluated and roll out by hospital IT.
  • 14.
    A revolution tookplace and it is forcing IT to focus more on customer service delivery rather than technology control.
  • 15.
    We are movingtowards a cloud infrastructure supporting a range of devices dictated by the consumer.
  • 16.
  • 17.
    HITECH, HIPAA, MeaningfulUse, and ICD 10 have forced healthcare institutions to invest heavily in IT infrastructure, talent, and application systems.
  • 18.
    These mandates have thepotential for being the catalyst to big data analysis.
  • 19.
  • 20.
    The emergence ofVoIP has allowed healthcare institutions to leverage the same IT infrastructure backbone to support data, and voice traffic.
  • 21.
    More importantly ithas created communication flexibility that started with mobility and is now evolving into applications.
  • 22.
  • 23.
    Emergence of socialmedia is allowing hospitals to reach out to staff, patients, and the general public in new ways, and to reach younger audiences.
  • 24.
    Next we willsee social evolve into flexible communications options for hospitals and care teams.
  • 25.
  • 26.
    Virtualization is increasing theconsolidation of services onto dedicated server farms and a high level of availability, and redundancy.
  • 27.
    IAAS and PAASare emerging and soon we may even see virtual cloud and virtual storage on the rise.
  • 28.
  • 29.
    Medical devices areevolving at an unprecedented rate, so much so that the 510K process is in dire need of an update in order to ensure that medical devices can use the latest in technological advancements.
  • 30.
    As these devicesbecome more integrated into the network, human error is becoming increasingly contained which ultimately decreases re-admission rates.
  • 31.
    The network infrastructure andbackbone must be agile enough to accommodate the explosive growth of connected devices and network traffic as we move towards an era where every device is communicating on the network.
  • 32.
  • 33.
    mHealth facilitates aspectrum of ways to leverage mobility, and mobile devices to improve clinical work flows and outcomes.
  • 34.
    These range fromvideo remote interpretation, to telemedicine and remote care use cases.
  • 35.
    The next stepwill be adoption of wearable technologies.
  • 36.
  • 37.
    The infrastructure andapplications everyone investing in holds the promise of being leveraged for big data analysis, trending, more insight for improved clinical results.
  • 38.
    Our challenge ishow to share the information while protecting patient privacy.