1. The document summarizes Frank Boermeester's presentation on the impact of digital health/Health 2.0 on society.
2. It discusses how digital technologies like wireless sensors, genomics, social networking, mobile connectivity and computing power are converging to transform healthcare.
3. The presentation outlines barriers to digital health like reimbursement models, but argues drivers like international competition and patient demand will push the industry to provide more remote, personalized care through technologies that empower individuals.
Created as a podcast for the Dental Informatics Online Community [http://www.dentalinformatics.com/], this is snapshot of what is going on with social technologies and Web 2.0 in various healthcare communities.
The FDA Digital Health Center of Excellence and the Advancement of Digital He...Greenlight Guru
The FDA Digital Health Center of Excellence is part of the planned evolution of the digital health program with the intent to drive synergy for digital health efforts, align strategy with implementation, prepare the FDA for the digital health future, and protect patients and maintain the FDA standards of safety and effectiveness.
Ultimately, the program works to strategically advance science and evidence for digital health technologies that meets the needs of
stakeholders.
This free in-depth webinar, presented by Matthew DiamondChief Medical Officer, Digital Health Center of Excellence, will cover the digital health landscape and areas of application, goals and outcomes, planned services and launch plan, and the current areas of focus - including AI/ML-Based SaMD.
This presentation originally aired during the 2021 State of Medical Device Virtual Summit.
Created as a podcast for the Dental Informatics Online Community [http://www.dentalinformatics.com/], this is snapshot of what is going on with social technologies and Web 2.0 in various healthcare communities.
The FDA Digital Health Center of Excellence and the Advancement of Digital He...Greenlight Guru
The FDA Digital Health Center of Excellence is part of the planned evolution of the digital health program with the intent to drive synergy for digital health efforts, align strategy with implementation, prepare the FDA for the digital health future, and protect patients and maintain the FDA standards of safety and effectiveness.
Ultimately, the program works to strategically advance science and evidence for digital health technologies that meets the needs of
stakeholders.
This free in-depth webinar, presented by Matthew DiamondChief Medical Officer, Digital Health Center of Excellence, will cover the digital health landscape and areas of application, goals and outcomes, planned services and launch plan, and the current areas of focus - including AI/ML-Based SaMD.
This presentation originally aired during the 2021 State of Medical Device Virtual Summit.
Presentation of Vishal Gulati (Draper Esprit, Venture Partner; Horizon Discovery Group PLC, Board Director) at the Forum of the BioRegion of Catalonia, organized by Biocat.
A review of the health sensor market estimated at 400M devices and worth $4B by 2014, including 36 companies offering devices across the wellness, chronic, diagnostic and monitoring markets. Purchase the report here: https://gumroad.com/l/Khrd
eHealth Consumers in the Age of Hyper-Personalizationchronaki
Where the Internet of Things meets healthcare we see a plethora of tools, gadgets, and apps that promise to improve life, health, and independence. As patients, family members ofr friends, we are subsumed under the term "eHealth consumers”. For us it is increasingly hard to navigate in the unfolding digital reality dominated by new gadgets, and fragmented information, data, and knowledge we don’t control. More personalized and targeted products, services, and content could alleviate this. In this slide deck we are specifically focusing on challenges and opportunities for personalization in view of varying eHealth literacy, lifestyle and health goals.
Technology forecast in healthcare industrySafina Shaikh
The use of technologies such as social networks, smartphones, internet applications and more is not only changing the way we communicate, but is also providing ground-breaking ways for us to monitor our health and well-being and giving us better access to information. Together these advancements are leading to a convergence of information, technology,people, and connectivity to improve health outcomes and health care.
The Smart Health Centers project places trained health information specialists (Navigators) in traditional and non-traditional health facilities to assist patients in connecting to their own medical records and find reliable information about their own conditions. All Navigators are trained in the Smart Health Center Model using this training guide.
Moving from idea to impact the emergence of m health 2.0Luca Sergio
Supported by the proliferation of smartphones and tablets, consumers and medical providers are snapping up medical technology via mobile apps and mobile sensors at an unprecedented rate. In the process, these early adopters are drawing tremendous attention to the mHealth space. This explosion of products and interest has brought the space to an inflection point: the emergence of mHealth 2.0. At this next stage, mHealth aims not just to provide information but to create meaningful behavior change in both patients and their medical providers. While the underlying idea is simple and the technology astonishing, it has been a challenge to deliver. I will argue that, going forward, the focus of players in the mHealth space must be on closing specific patient behavioral loops, building bridges between non-interoperable data systems, and permitting doctors to provide better care through deeper clinical insights—and all of this must happen without drowning doctors in a deluge of raw data. So how do we get there? The future lies in the aggregation of data from multiple sensors, analyzed and re-expressed as actionable insights for behavioral change. The winners will be those who can produce the most useful sensors (embedded in the most attractive and easy-to-use form factors) and marry them to cloud systems and intelligent algorithms that enable effortless analysis and sharing of insights that inspire action.
Digital Therapeutics / Digital Health Innovation Rawane Jabara
Ampersand & Ampersand is a digital health and therapeutics agency based in London. We specialise in co-developing clinically relevant software that puts patients at the heart of their health management. "Digital therapeutics represent a new generation of healthcare that uses innovative, clinically-validated disease management and direct treatment applications to enhance, and in some cases replace, current medical practices and treatments." - Digital Therapeutics Alliance. Check out our work here and get in touch. 3amp.com rawane@3amp.com
The future of healthcare: when mobile disappearsMatteo Penzo
In today’s digital world, mobile devices are the powerful bridges between a connected ecosystem of healthcare professionals, caregivers and patients. New developments in big data, wearable sensors and the application of social layers are shifting an industry that used to focus on curing diseases to one that emphasizes health and wellness. But the mass adoption of connected healthcare will only happen when solutions are designed to be intuitive and technologies are forgotten. The future of healthcare will happen when mobile disappears into the background, placing the patient in the center and in control of their lives.
The new era of mobile health ushered in by the wide adoption of ubiquitous computing and mobile communications has brought opportunities for governments and companies to rethink their concept of healthcare. Simultaneously, the worldwide urbanization process represents a formidable challenge and attracts attention toward cities that are expected to gather higher populations and provide citizens with services in an efficient and human manner. These two trends have led to the appearance of mobile health and smart cities. In this talk we introduce the new concept of smart health, which is the context-aware complement of mobile health within smart cities. We provide an overview of the main fields of knowledge that are involved in the process of building this new concept. Additionally, we discuss the main challenges and opportunities that s-Health would imply and provide a common ground for further research.
XX in Health Week 2013 SF Mixer at Practice FusionLauren Fifield
Exploring the concept of the expert, how newcomers have transformed other industries, the role of the newcomer in healthcare, and how we can actively engage talent to enter our industry.
Smart Patient Engagement Solutions for Physical Therapists and Rehabilitation...David Dansereau
My presentation will look at the benefits of harnessing new health technology and mobile health data to improve therapy services, promote wellness and awareness through better patient engagement and help improve medical research. I'll also cover what I believe the future holds for the mHealth industry with respect to rehabilitation and prevention, and what challenges lie ahead for providers that consider adopting these new methods of care delivery.
Note: This is based on my personal experience,interviews and research. Please keep and open mind as this is new territory for all of us!
Presentation of Vishal Gulati (Draper Esprit, Venture Partner; Horizon Discovery Group PLC, Board Director) at the Forum of the BioRegion of Catalonia, organized by Biocat.
A review of the health sensor market estimated at 400M devices and worth $4B by 2014, including 36 companies offering devices across the wellness, chronic, diagnostic and monitoring markets. Purchase the report here: https://gumroad.com/l/Khrd
eHealth Consumers in the Age of Hyper-Personalizationchronaki
Where the Internet of Things meets healthcare we see a plethora of tools, gadgets, and apps that promise to improve life, health, and independence. As patients, family members ofr friends, we are subsumed under the term "eHealth consumers”. For us it is increasingly hard to navigate in the unfolding digital reality dominated by new gadgets, and fragmented information, data, and knowledge we don’t control. More personalized and targeted products, services, and content could alleviate this. In this slide deck we are specifically focusing on challenges and opportunities for personalization in view of varying eHealth literacy, lifestyle and health goals.
Technology forecast in healthcare industrySafina Shaikh
The use of technologies such as social networks, smartphones, internet applications and more is not only changing the way we communicate, but is also providing ground-breaking ways for us to monitor our health and well-being and giving us better access to information. Together these advancements are leading to a convergence of information, technology,people, and connectivity to improve health outcomes and health care.
The Smart Health Centers project places trained health information specialists (Navigators) in traditional and non-traditional health facilities to assist patients in connecting to their own medical records and find reliable information about their own conditions. All Navigators are trained in the Smart Health Center Model using this training guide.
Moving from idea to impact the emergence of m health 2.0Luca Sergio
Supported by the proliferation of smartphones and tablets, consumers and medical providers are snapping up medical technology via mobile apps and mobile sensors at an unprecedented rate. In the process, these early adopters are drawing tremendous attention to the mHealth space. This explosion of products and interest has brought the space to an inflection point: the emergence of mHealth 2.0. At this next stage, mHealth aims not just to provide information but to create meaningful behavior change in both patients and their medical providers. While the underlying idea is simple and the technology astonishing, it has been a challenge to deliver. I will argue that, going forward, the focus of players in the mHealth space must be on closing specific patient behavioral loops, building bridges between non-interoperable data systems, and permitting doctors to provide better care through deeper clinical insights—and all of this must happen without drowning doctors in a deluge of raw data. So how do we get there? The future lies in the aggregation of data from multiple sensors, analyzed and re-expressed as actionable insights for behavioral change. The winners will be those who can produce the most useful sensors (embedded in the most attractive and easy-to-use form factors) and marry them to cloud systems and intelligent algorithms that enable effortless analysis and sharing of insights that inspire action.
Digital Therapeutics / Digital Health Innovation Rawane Jabara
Ampersand & Ampersand is a digital health and therapeutics agency based in London. We specialise in co-developing clinically relevant software that puts patients at the heart of their health management. "Digital therapeutics represent a new generation of healthcare that uses innovative, clinically-validated disease management and direct treatment applications to enhance, and in some cases replace, current medical practices and treatments." - Digital Therapeutics Alliance. Check out our work here and get in touch. 3amp.com rawane@3amp.com
The future of healthcare: when mobile disappearsMatteo Penzo
In today’s digital world, mobile devices are the powerful bridges between a connected ecosystem of healthcare professionals, caregivers and patients. New developments in big data, wearable sensors and the application of social layers are shifting an industry that used to focus on curing diseases to one that emphasizes health and wellness. But the mass adoption of connected healthcare will only happen when solutions are designed to be intuitive and technologies are forgotten. The future of healthcare will happen when mobile disappears into the background, placing the patient in the center and in control of their lives.
The new era of mobile health ushered in by the wide adoption of ubiquitous computing and mobile communications has brought opportunities for governments and companies to rethink their concept of healthcare. Simultaneously, the worldwide urbanization process represents a formidable challenge and attracts attention toward cities that are expected to gather higher populations and provide citizens with services in an efficient and human manner. These two trends have led to the appearance of mobile health and smart cities. In this talk we introduce the new concept of smart health, which is the context-aware complement of mobile health within smart cities. We provide an overview of the main fields of knowledge that are involved in the process of building this new concept. Additionally, we discuss the main challenges and opportunities that s-Health would imply and provide a common ground for further research.
XX in Health Week 2013 SF Mixer at Practice FusionLauren Fifield
Exploring the concept of the expert, how newcomers have transformed other industries, the role of the newcomer in healthcare, and how we can actively engage talent to enter our industry.
Smart Patient Engagement Solutions for Physical Therapists and Rehabilitation...David Dansereau
My presentation will look at the benefits of harnessing new health technology and mobile health data to improve therapy services, promote wellness and awareness through better patient engagement and help improve medical research. I'll also cover what I believe the future holds for the mHealth industry with respect to rehabilitation and prevention, and what challenges lie ahead for providers that consider adopting these new methods of care delivery.
Note: This is based on my personal experience,interviews and research. Please keep and open mind as this is new territory for all of us!
Consumerism, Innovation and Best Practices to Thrive in the Future of HealthJustin Barnes
May 1, 2019 University of Toronto, Dalla Lana School of Public Health, The Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation (IHPME) Keynote speaker Justin Barnes, a health innovation strategist and co-founder of Health Innovation Think Tank, will provide yet another integral perspective focused on the ways in which we can scale up and implement evidence-based changes in health care technology on a global scale. Having testified before Congress on more than twenty occasions delivering statements on virtual care, alternative payment methods, consumerism, connected health and the globalization of healthcare, Justin offers thought leadership for the university, the healthcare community as well as other key stakeholders.
Consumer Driven Health – IHPME Research Day
Looks to the Future of Health Care
The trend towards consumer driven health, whether it be mobile apps, wearable devices, or easy access to electronic health records, is changing the landscape of our health care system and the way we think about care.
20191203 DOE Data Driven Healthcare- Expert EventDayOne
DayOne Experts - Data-driven healthcare – are we ready?
Data is transforming healthcare. Health data from multiple sources such as electronic health records, genomic testing, imaging and digital tools, combined with advanced analytics can be used to deliver more personalised care, improve outcomes, empower patients and make healthcare more sustainable and efficient. But is the industry ready for these new approaches? What is needed on the policy level and in the regulatory field to enable a new era of data driven health solutions? How will their business models look like?
This is what we discussed at this DayOne Expert Event, which was proudly presented in close collaboration with the Embassy of the Netherlands, fostering the exchange between two world leading healthcare innovation ecosystems.
The speech focuses on digital innovation from the point of view of a pharmaceutical company: how technology can integrate the offer of drugs and therapeutic solutions for the healthcare and well-being of citizens. Last year the app I-nonni was presented as a Sanofi start-up project with the primary goal of connecting the older adults with relatives and health professionals, such as doctors and pharmacists, in an easy and effective way. This year the progress in the services offered will be presented, as well as a study proving the effectiveness of the digital fitness tool that we developed with the aim of training the cognitive abilities of older adults (and not only).
Qrepublik MedID Presentation Product (NEW)_compressed.pdfQREPUBLIC, INC.
QRepublik Medical ID is a beautifully designed medical ID platform built exclusively for people. We make it easy to medical IDs to thousands of people in the United States and around the world. In emergencies or times of need, we provide members’ critical health and identification information to first responders. This information exchange empowers first responders to act promptly to protect and save lives.
Solutions for B2B &B2C market
Information+Integration ? Innovation an HL7/EFMI/HIMSS @eHealthweek2015 in Rigachronaki
Join us to explore “Interoperability in action: information + integration = innovation?” and engage in lively debate on how rethinking interoperability standards and continuing education can bridge divides, change cultures, and open markets!
Perspectives from health management, industry, government, health education, and standardization exemplify challenges and opportunities for liberation of data that can drive desired social and technological innovation.
This is a call for action to explore how the partnership of HL7, EFMI and HIMSS can catalyze the equation “information + integration = innovation” to bridge divides, change culture and open markets.
- HealthTech innovation is disrupting healthcare and its established players
- Technology is driving a new paradigm to create better health care
- Developing markets can leapfrog their healthcare infrastructure limitations
- New opportunities are opening to shape the new paradigm
Similar to 20130226 impact van zorg 2 0 op onze samenleving (20)
4. What is Digital Health / Health 2.0?
8 converging elements:
– Wireless Sensors and Devices
– Genomics (A, C, G, T = digital)
– Social Networking
– Mobile Connectivity and Bandwidth
– Imaging
– Health Information Systems
– The Internet
– Computing Power and the Data Universe
5. eHealth versus Digital Health / Health
2.0?
1. Heavy duty ERP & EHR vs light consumer
technologies (web & mobile) and web 2.0 services
(social networks)
2. Technology & data for providers versus technology
& data for consumers-patients as active
participants in care
3. Automating existing healthcare processes versus
disrupting healthcare models
4. Large technology companies vs lean startups
28. In just two years, 15+ health startup accelerators &
incubators were established...
& 9 major digital health conferences
& numerous hackathons, competitions and investor
matchmaking events
http://healthstartup.eu/the-ultimate-health-
startup-resources-guide/
Spawning hundreds of new devices and apps
touching all aspects of healthcare
33. A Digital Health Manifesto
The future of healthcare, possible today
34. A digital health manifesto
1. I want access to a transparent
market for healthcare services,
based on cost, outcomes and
reputations
- I have a right to choose the best
(and know who the best are)
35. Which hospital?
Ask your GP...
Ratings on ***** scale:
•Outcome:
•Quality:
•Price:
•Experience:
42. A digital health manifesto
2. I want access to remote/mobile
health services
- Avoid travel & waiting rooms
- ‘Always on’ monitoring (the doctor
calls you)
43. Patient adjective. bearing provocation,
annoyance, misfortune, delay, hardship, pain,
etc., with fortitude and calm and without
complaint, anger, or the like.
52. A digital health manifesto
3. I want access to (and I want my
clinician to have access to)
updated/complete medical
records, medical knowledge &
decision support tools
53. This is troubling
In the age of DROPBOX....
My (family’s) medical records are scattered at numerous
institutions and clinicians in Belgium, South Africa, New Zealand
and the U.K.
My new GP has no data. I have no data (except Kind & Gezin
booklets buried deep in a drawer)
54. But this is an OUTRAGE
In the age of Google, where the world’s information should be
universally and instantly available...
The world’s scientific community produces 1,5 new articles a
year. These are published by a small number of publishing
companies, in journals which cost universities up to
€20,000/year
Long peer review process, causes delay of 2-5 years before
publication of results
Small wonder:
13,300 researchers have signed up to a boycott of Elsevier
UK Welcome Trust & Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation want
research results to be freely available within 6 months
55. And here’s another OUTRAGE
In an age where “zero tolerance for error” is possible (as in
nuclear power stations, airliners, etc) using decision support
systems and quality control systems...
Death due to medical error is a top ten cause of death
62. The story of
e-Patient Dave
2007 diagnosed stage IV renal
cancer, 24 weeks to live
Via his kidney patient community
he found information outside the
‘clinical information pipeline’ about
a promising experimental drug
Took part in clinical trial,
successful treatment..
Today he’s a patient engagement
advocate
72. ...& real-time sequencing”
Oxford Nanopore developed
a disposable DNA
sequencing device the size
of a USB memory stick
whose low cost, portability
and ease of use are
designed to make DNA
sequencing universally
accessible. A single
MinION is expected to retail
at less than $900
81. A digital health manifesto
5. All my anonymous health data
available to researchers
82. I’ve experienced thousands of
symptoms, been diagnosed
with numerous medical
conditions, taken hundreds of
medications, undergone many
scans and had many many
blood tests...
Yet, I haven’t contributed one
bit of data to medical research
87. A digital health manifesto
1. I want access to a transparent
market for healthcare services,
based on cost, outcomes and
reputations
- I have a right to choose the best
(and know who the best are)
88. Barriers
Cultural barrier? (is competition in
healthcare acceptable?)
The data is out there, simply needs to
be made available
If institutions & doctors don’t release it,
patients-consumers will gather it
themselves… the writing is on the
wall
89. A digital health manifesto
2. I want access to remote/mobile
health services
- Avoid travel & waiting rooms
- ‘Always on’ monitoring (the doctor
calls you)
91. A digital health manifesto
3. I want access to (and I want my
clinician to have access to)
updated/complete medical
records, medical knowledge &
decision support tools
92. Barriers
Medical records: a matter of time
Personal records: cultural? (driver will
be communities, collaborative
EHR, or coaching)
Medical knowledge: IP, clinical trials,
peer review process
Decision support: cultural? (driver will
be outcomes-based competition)
93. A digital health manifesto
4. Empower me with technology to
take control over my health
- Doctor, take this seriously
97. Bringing it all together...
Use your imagination…
At birth – genome, PHR, tailored lifestyle
programs kick in
Adult – continuous monitoring of risk indicators,
setting personal goals, more coaching
programs, choosing providers in transparent
market, sharing data with patient communities
and researchers
Elderly – at-home monitoring, DIY emergency
care (devices, instruction kits)
101. So what?
Policy/government – enable new
business models by adapting
reimbursement & liability
legislation; and set common
standards for interoperability and
security