Global healthcare policy and operations are migrating from volume-based and hospital-centric to value-based and patient-centric. Mobility, big data analytics, cloud, and social media are critical to this transformation.
The document discusses the state of personal connected health, including the roles of wearables, sensors, apps, devices, and interoperability with electronic health records. It describes how consumer-generated health data from these tools is being integrated into clinical workflows to improve care, though incentives and barriers still exist. Evidence is emerging that connected health can help with conditions like diabetes, and the field continues to see strong venture funding and innovation.
Personal connected health is currently characterized by limited thought leadership, insufficient coordination and collaboration, and a lack of awareness and understanding of the full potential by all stakeholders: public, providers, policymakers, industry and patients. The Personal Connected Health Alliance is defining the the field of personal connected health to inspire market and policy innovation, research and collective action for sustained adoption of personal connected health technology. The vision is better health and well being for all through increased personal responsibilities and connectivity as well as improved care delivery enabled by technology.
The document discusses emerging innovations in health care payment and delivery models. It outlines three manifestations of health care budgets: the federal budget framework, budgeting in the private market through accountable care organizations and other value-based models, and individuals on a budget facing increased cost-sharing. It also examines new incentives like meaningful use standards and payment reform driving changes like patient-centered medical homes, accountable care organizations, and bundled payments. Overall, the document argues that greater availability of health data, new payment incentives, and the growth of chronic disease are fueling innovation in models that shift accountability and risk to providers to improve quality and reduce costs.
HxRefactored 2015: Charles Boicey "Interoperability Exercise, Triple Store & ...HxRefactored
Charles Boicey, RN and Enterprise Analytics Architect for Stony Brook Medicine shares how RDF Triples can reconcile data from multiple and disparate sources to unlock great insight.
The potential of a digital health ecosystemVelametis
Our idea of digital health ecosystems and their potential to deliver value to all stakeholders involved, is changing. The COVID-19 pandemic accelerated the need to improve remote care, engagement tools and interconnectivity, which are all necessary to support a functioning digital ecosystem.
In this opinion piece, we touch upon the basic components of a Digital Health Ecosystem and how it can be optimised with health technology.
Content overview:
What is a Digital Health Ecosystem?
Why Do We Need Digital Health Ecosystems?
The Pros and Cons
The Potential
Digital Health Ecosystems to Watch
Download here:
https://velametis.com/the-potential-of-a-digital-health-ecosystem/
This document discusses transforming decentralized healthcare through an integrated care and insight system. It highlights that 95% of patient encounters occur in decentralized facilities but 95% of health data comes from centralized facilities, creating a major disconnect. The system aims to enable health workers to deliver care on par with experts, provide stakeholders with real-time tracking and analytics insights, and use care data to drive improved insights which then improve care. It provides examples of how the system has reduced errors, increased compliance with protocols, and lowered costs while dramatically increasing oversight, epidemiological accuracy, and the reach of healthcare.
HXR 2016: The Health IoT: Remote Care and Mobile Solutions -Manu Varma, PhilipsHxRefactored
The digital transformation of healthcare is collecting millions of data points from connected devices that monitor patients. Chronic conditions are increasing globally and healthcare spending is rising unsustainably. Digital technologies enable moving from reactive to proactive health by providing a longitudinal personalized overview of patients through monitoring, informatics and connected care. Philips partners with healthcare organizations to implement telehealth programs that have led to faster discharge rates from hospitals and ICUs, as well as significant cost savings through reduced readmissions. Digital technologies are transforming healthcare delivery from reactive to proactive models through connected health across settings.
Mark Behl Presents: 3 Up-and-Coming Digital Health Companies That Put Patient...Mark Behl
The biggest obstacle to population health innovation is existing legacy systems. By putting patient experience first, three startups are exemplifying what is possible in digital health.
The document discusses the state of personal connected health, including the roles of wearables, sensors, apps, devices, and interoperability with electronic health records. It describes how consumer-generated health data from these tools is being integrated into clinical workflows to improve care, though incentives and barriers still exist. Evidence is emerging that connected health can help with conditions like diabetes, and the field continues to see strong venture funding and innovation.
Personal connected health is currently characterized by limited thought leadership, insufficient coordination and collaboration, and a lack of awareness and understanding of the full potential by all stakeholders: public, providers, policymakers, industry and patients. The Personal Connected Health Alliance is defining the the field of personal connected health to inspire market and policy innovation, research and collective action for sustained adoption of personal connected health technology. The vision is better health and well being for all through increased personal responsibilities and connectivity as well as improved care delivery enabled by technology.
The document discusses emerging innovations in health care payment and delivery models. It outlines three manifestations of health care budgets: the federal budget framework, budgeting in the private market through accountable care organizations and other value-based models, and individuals on a budget facing increased cost-sharing. It also examines new incentives like meaningful use standards and payment reform driving changes like patient-centered medical homes, accountable care organizations, and bundled payments. Overall, the document argues that greater availability of health data, new payment incentives, and the growth of chronic disease are fueling innovation in models that shift accountability and risk to providers to improve quality and reduce costs.
HxRefactored 2015: Charles Boicey "Interoperability Exercise, Triple Store & ...HxRefactored
Charles Boicey, RN and Enterprise Analytics Architect for Stony Brook Medicine shares how RDF Triples can reconcile data from multiple and disparate sources to unlock great insight.
The potential of a digital health ecosystemVelametis
Our idea of digital health ecosystems and their potential to deliver value to all stakeholders involved, is changing. The COVID-19 pandemic accelerated the need to improve remote care, engagement tools and interconnectivity, which are all necessary to support a functioning digital ecosystem.
In this opinion piece, we touch upon the basic components of a Digital Health Ecosystem and how it can be optimised with health technology.
Content overview:
What is a Digital Health Ecosystem?
Why Do We Need Digital Health Ecosystems?
The Pros and Cons
The Potential
Digital Health Ecosystems to Watch
Download here:
https://velametis.com/the-potential-of-a-digital-health-ecosystem/
This document discusses transforming decentralized healthcare through an integrated care and insight system. It highlights that 95% of patient encounters occur in decentralized facilities but 95% of health data comes from centralized facilities, creating a major disconnect. The system aims to enable health workers to deliver care on par with experts, provide stakeholders with real-time tracking and analytics insights, and use care data to drive improved insights which then improve care. It provides examples of how the system has reduced errors, increased compliance with protocols, and lowered costs while dramatically increasing oversight, epidemiological accuracy, and the reach of healthcare.
HXR 2016: The Health IoT: Remote Care and Mobile Solutions -Manu Varma, PhilipsHxRefactored
The digital transformation of healthcare is collecting millions of data points from connected devices that monitor patients. Chronic conditions are increasing globally and healthcare spending is rising unsustainably. Digital technologies enable moving from reactive to proactive health by providing a longitudinal personalized overview of patients through monitoring, informatics and connected care. Philips partners with healthcare organizations to implement telehealth programs that have led to faster discharge rates from hospitals and ICUs, as well as significant cost savings through reduced readmissions. Digital technologies are transforming healthcare delivery from reactive to proactive models through connected health across settings.
Mark Behl Presents: 3 Up-and-Coming Digital Health Companies That Put Patient...Mark Behl
The biggest obstacle to population health innovation is existing legacy systems. By putting patient experience first, three startups are exemplifying what is possible in digital health.
Pharma must change the ways it deals with physicians and patients. These three digital health technology companies will revolutionize the way Pharma does business.
The presentation defines the shift in the health care system to fit the model of Consumerism and Customer Centricity. IT details the changes focus for the Customer, the Providers (Doctors and Hospitals), the Pharmaceutical Companies and the Insurance Companies.
Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan and Blue Care Network of Michigan are nonprofit health insurers licensed by the Blue Cross Blue Shield Association. The document discusses how consumers want more choice and control over their healthcare, moving away from a reactive treatment model towards proactive health management. It argues that personalized medicine using genomic data and predictive analytics can improve outcomes by matching patients to effective treatments while reducing costs through more efficient care delivery.
How Effective Use of Big Data Could Change the HealthcareSunny Marks
Big data has the potential to significantly improve healthcare by allowing analysis of large amounts of patient data from diverse sources. This can help predict disease onset, reduce medical costs, and improve treatment outcomes. By tracking purchasing patterns, big data already enables prediction of conditions like pregnancy. Widespread use of big data tools in healthcare could facilitate personalized, evidence-based care that improves lifestyle choices, medication accuracy, and lowers costs through reduced errors and waste.
HXR 2016: The Health IoT: Remote Care and Mobile Solutions -Andrew Hooge, Val...HxRefactored
Through new telehealth technologies and increased data analysis physicians are gaining insights into patients like never before, allowing them to facilitate early interventions, improve adherence, and reduce readmission rates -- not to mention at a price more affordable than ever. The companies you’ll hear from in this session are using a healthy and innovative mix of data, educational tools, sensors, and more to improve patient outcomes.
Healthy Actionable Based Information Technology Keyur Shah
HABIT is a healthiness trend measuring visualization dashboard. HABIT integrates over platforms capturing coherent data and has the capability to provide weightage to various health criterions. Based on the weightages assigned to the criterions show visualization patterns depicting increase and decrease in healthiness trends. HABIT allows this weightage to be saved as standard benchmarks as per various geographies. Based on the set benchmark organizations can visualize healthiness trends through comparative charts.
Sucessful Healthcare Organizations will be Data DrivenMichelle Blackmer
The document discusses how healthcare organizations are becoming increasingly data-driven. It notes that there is an estimated 50 petabytes of healthcare data, much of which is unstructured, and stored across hundreds of different sources like medical images and lab results. Integrating medical devices with electronic health records could save over $30 billion per year while improving patient care. However, only a third of hospitals currently integrate devices with EHRs. The large amount of data from various sources presents challenges around data quality, fragmentation, accuracy, and security. Healthcare organizations are increasingly relying on data and analytics to support population health, deliver best practices, increase patient engagement, and move from volume-based to value-based care. Clean, connected, and secure data
Duality Technologies_Driving Secure Collaboration in Healthcare_mHealth IsraelLevi Shapiro
This document summarizes Duality's secure data collaboration platform based on homomorphic encryption. It enables organizations to apply analytics to encrypted data without exposing sensitive information. Duality offers use cases like secure model training, records aggregation for real-world evidence, and clinical-genomic analysis. The platform provides four collaboration models - encrypting data and running analytics on it, encrypting models for deployment, encrypting datasets for linkage and analysis, and encrypting queries. This allows for multi-center real-world data analysis while preserving privacy and compliance with regulations.
Medicalchain - ECO 15: Digital connectivity in healthcareInnovation Agency
This document discusses challenges in digital healthcare for both healthcare organizations and patients, including issues around privacy, siloed and fragmented data, and lack of interoperability. It envisions a future where patients have control over a single digital health record that combines clinical and patient-generated data. The blockchain is presented as a solution to address these challenges by providing encrypted and immutable health records, open standards for data sharing, and giving patients control over their data through a decentralized platform. An overview is given of Medicalchain's pilot program and blockchain-based healthcare platform that aims to unlock and integrate siloed healthcare data while ensuring privacy and interoperability.
Is mHealth Prescribing: Dead or Thriving?AppScript
App rating is happening everywhere in the ecosystem, but without putting apps in practice, evaluating the prescribing data and patient feedback, we only have half the story. Learn about the prescribing data, rating and scoring methodologies and the evidence of the growing promise of mobile health curation, discovery and distribution.
HOW THE IoMT IS TRANSFORMING HEALTHCARE!
Smart, connected medical devices and the data
they generate are fueling the booming Internet
of Medical Things (IoMT) industry.
The document discusses diabetes management and emerging wireless solutions. It describes how WellDoc uses wireless technologies and a virtual coach to help diabetes patients better manage their condition through medication reminders, blood glucose tracking, and behavioral modification tools. A case study shows how WellDoc helped a patient lower their A1c level and improve self-management over 3 months by analyzing their data, providing education, and facilitating collaboration between the patient and healthcare provider. The conclusion emphasizes how WellDoc aims to engage and empower patients while also supporting clinicians.
The healthcare industry is a perfect candidate for disruptive technology. Social media, cloud computing and mobile devices lead the way. However the transformation is not without its risks. This presentation looks at the top security risks of these technologies and how vendors can address them to increase adoption.
How IT Helps Healthcare Organizations Put Patients FirstInsight
Working to meet evolving patient expectations while also trying to manage day-to-day operations can be challenging. Learn how to get the best of both worlds.
Learn more here: http://ms.spr.ly/6001TwLht
Hospital information system https://arsshamt20.wixsite.com/website-2ARSHIShaikh13
Digital transformations in healthcare are utilizing diverse technological tools and solutions to improve the patient experience, administration, service, and make communication more effective. Key trends driving digital transformation include the rise of on-demand healthcare, importance of big data, treating patients with virtual reality, growth of wearable devices, predictive healthcare, wonders of artificial intelligence, and blockchain electronic health records. Challenges to digital transformation include issues with data processing, cybersecurity, digital user experience, acceptance, costs, and integration across the healthcare system. A multi-step process of assessing needs, building technology roadmaps, executing solutions, and ensuring ongoing support can help drive innovation in healthcare through digital transformation.
The document discusses using big data and remote patient monitoring to create a more personalized electronic health record (EHR) system. It proposes integrating data from sources like wearables, social media, medical devices and patient lifestyle directly into the EHR to improve health outcomes. This would allow healthcare providers to remotely monitor patients in a more convenient and cost-effective manner. The market for remote patient monitoring solutions is expected to grow significantly in coming years as its adoption increases.
HXR 2016: Improving Insurance Member Experiences -Christopher NeuharthHxRefactored
This section of the agenda will feature leaders in innovation, customer experience, and design within the health insurance space. Each panelist will present the current state of experience at their organization, what successes they have seen, what situations they have learned from, and what their challenges and obstacles are, and where they would like to see things head in the future. Then Amy Cueva will guide the group in a discussion around strategy, measurement, culture change, and other important topics relevant to delivering phenomenal experiences.
Big data in the real world opportunities and challenges facing healthcare -...Leo Barella
The Healthcare system will be target of major disruption more than any other industry in the next 10 years.
The Digital economics and increasing demand by consumers for more real time information in order to make better decisions on who they want to "hire" to perform services for them or in their behalf will be the driver of this disruption. Analytics, Big Data and Machine Learning will lay the foundation for the next generation of healthcare yet there are still many challenges to truly revolutionize the healthcare system end to end (Providers, Pharma, Payers)
HXR 2016: Free the Data Access & Integration -Peter Levin, Amida Technology S...HxRefactored
Utilizing the power of data can empower patients and arm developers in the creation of new tools and platforms. Whether it’s authenticating data, downloading it via BlueButton, or connecting data with other applications using BlueButton on FHIR, increased data accessibility is a win for everyone. Presenters will give an overview of the opportunities and challenges that exist today and share the newest technologies and initiatives that are overcoming them.
The Impact of Telemedicine on Healthcare Key Statistics and Trends (1).pdfQuickblox
QuickBlox was one of the first communication solution providers on the marketplace to offer chat API, recognizing an emerging need for remote real-time communication between parties
Pharma must change the ways it deals with physicians and patients. These three digital health technology companies will revolutionize the way Pharma does business.
The presentation defines the shift in the health care system to fit the model of Consumerism and Customer Centricity. IT details the changes focus for the Customer, the Providers (Doctors and Hospitals), the Pharmaceutical Companies and the Insurance Companies.
Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan and Blue Care Network of Michigan are nonprofit health insurers licensed by the Blue Cross Blue Shield Association. The document discusses how consumers want more choice and control over their healthcare, moving away from a reactive treatment model towards proactive health management. It argues that personalized medicine using genomic data and predictive analytics can improve outcomes by matching patients to effective treatments while reducing costs through more efficient care delivery.
How Effective Use of Big Data Could Change the HealthcareSunny Marks
Big data has the potential to significantly improve healthcare by allowing analysis of large amounts of patient data from diverse sources. This can help predict disease onset, reduce medical costs, and improve treatment outcomes. By tracking purchasing patterns, big data already enables prediction of conditions like pregnancy. Widespread use of big data tools in healthcare could facilitate personalized, evidence-based care that improves lifestyle choices, medication accuracy, and lowers costs through reduced errors and waste.
HXR 2016: The Health IoT: Remote Care and Mobile Solutions -Andrew Hooge, Val...HxRefactored
Through new telehealth technologies and increased data analysis physicians are gaining insights into patients like never before, allowing them to facilitate early interventions, improve adherence, and reduce readmission rates -- not to mention at a price more affordable than ever. The companies you’ll hear from in this session are using a healthy and innovative mix of data, educational tools, sensors, and more to improve patient outcomes.
Healthy Actionable Based Information Technology Keyur Shah
HABIT is a healthiness trend measuring visualization dashboard. HABIT integrates over platforms capturing coherent data and has the capability to provide weightage to various health criterions. Based on the weightages assigned to the criterions show visualization patterns depicting increase and decrease in healthiness trends. HABIT allows this weightage to be saved as standard benchmarks as per various geographies. Based on the set benchmark organizations can visualize healthiness trends through comparative charts.
Sucessful Healthcare Organizations will be Data DrivenMichelle Blackmer
The document discusses how healthcare organizations are becoming increasingly data-driven. It notes that there is an estimated 50 petabytes of healthcare data, much of which is unstructured, and stored across hundreds of different sources like medical images and lab results. Integrating medical devices with electronic health records could save over $30 billion per year while improving patient care. However, only a third of hospitals currently integrate devices with EHRs. The large amount of data from various sources presents challenges around data quality, fragmentation, accuracy, and security. Healthcare organizations are increasingly relying on data and analytics to support population health, deliver best practices, increase patient engagement, and move from volume-based to value-based care. Clean, connected, and secure data
Duality Technologies_Driving Secure Collaboration in Healthcare_mHealth IsraelLevi Shapiro
This document summarizes Duality's secure data collaboration platform based on homomorphic encryption. It enables organizations to apply analytics to encrypted data without exposing sensitive information. Duality offers use cases like secure model training, records aggregation for real-world evidence, and clinical-genomic analysis. The platform provides four collaboration models - encrypting data and running analytics on it, encrypting models for deployment, encrypting datasets for linkage and analysis, and encrypting queries. This allows for multi-center real-world data analysis while preserving privacy and compliance with regulations.
Medicalchain - ECO 15: Digital connectivity in healthcareInnovation Agency
This document discusses challenges in digital healthcare for both healthcare organizations and patients, including issues around privacy, siloed and fragmented data, and lack of interoperability. It envisions a future where patients have control over a single digital health record that combines clinical and patient-generated data. The blockchain is presented as a solution to address these challenges by providing encrypted and immutable health records, open standards for data sharing, and giving patients control over their data through a decentralized platform. An overview is given of Medicalchain's pilot program and blockchain-based healthcare platform that aims to unlock and integrate siloed healthcare data while ensuring privacy and interoperability.
Is mHealth Prescribing: Dead or Thriving?AppScript
App rating is happening everywhere in the ecosystem, but without putting apps in practice, evaluating the prescribing data and patient feedback, we only have half the story. Learn about the prescribing data, rating and scoring methodologies and the evidence of the growing promise of mobile health curation, discovery and distribution.
HOW THE IoMT IS TRANSFORMING HEALTHCARE!
Smart, connected medical devices and the data
they generate are fueling the booming Internet
of Medical Things (IoMT) industry.
The document discusses diabetes management and emerging wireless solutions. It describes how WellDoc uses wireless technologies and a virtual coach to help diabetes patients better manage their condition through medication reminders, blood glucose tracking, and behavioral modification tools. A case study shows how WellDoc helped a patient lower their A1c level and improve self-management over 3 months by analyzing their data, providing education, and facilitating collaboration between the patient and healthcare provider. The conclusion emphasizes how WellDoc aims to engage and empower patients while also supporting clinicians.
The healthcare industry is a perfect candidate for disruptive technology. Social media, cloud computing and mobile devices lead the way. However the transformation is not without its risks. This presentation looks at the top security risks of these technologies and how vendors can address them to increase adoption.
How IT Helps Healthcare Organizations Put Patients FirstInsight
Working to meet evolving patient expectations while also trying to manage day-to-day operations can be challenging. Learn how to get the best of both worlds.
Learn more here: http://ms.spr.ly/6001TwLht
Hospital information system https://arsshamt20.wixsite.com/website-2ARSHIShaikh13
Digital transformations in healthcare are utilizing diverse technological tools and solutions to improve the patient experience, administration, service, and make communication more effective. Key trends driving digital transformation include the rise of on-demand healthcare, importance of big data, treating patients with virtual reality, growth of wearable devices, predictive healthcare, wonders of artificial intelligence, and blockchain electronic health records. Challenges to digital transformation include issues with data processing, cybersecurity, digital user experience, acceptance, costs, and integration across the healthcare system. A multi-step process of assessing needs, building technology roadmaps, executing solutions, and ensuring ongoing support can help drive innovation in healthcare through digital transformation.
The document discusses using big data and remote patient monitoring to create a more personalized electronic health record (EHR) system. It proposes integrating data from sources like wearables, social media, medical devices and patient lifestyle directly into the EHR to improve health outcomes. This would allow healthcare providers to remotely monitor patients in a more convenient and cost-effective manner. The market for remote patient monitoring solutions is expected to grow significantly in coming years as its adoption increases.
HXR 2016: Improving Insurance Member Experiences -Christopher NeuharthHxRefactored
This section of the agenda will feature leaders in innovation, customer experience, and design within the health insurance space. Each panelist will present the current state of experience at their organization, what successes they have seen, what situations they have learned from, and what their challenges and obstacles are, and where they would like to see things head in the future. Then Amy Cueva will guide the group in a discussion around strategy, measurement, culture change, and other important topics relevant to delivering phenomenal experiences.
Big data in the real world opportunities and challenges facing healthcare -...Leo Barella
The Healthcare system will be target of major disruption more than any other industry in the next 10 years.
The Digital economics and increasing demand by consumers for more real time information in order to make better decisions on who they want to "hire" to perform services for them or in their behalf will be the driver of this disruption. Analytics, Big Data and Machine Learning will lay the foundation for the next generation of healthcare yet there are still many challenges to truly revolutionize the healthcare system end to end (Providers, Pharma, Payers)
HXR 2016: Free the Data Access & Integration -Peter Levin, Amida Technology S...HxRefactored
Utilizing the power of data can empower patients and arm developers in the creation of new tools and platforms. Whether it’s authenticating data, downloading it via BlueButton, or connecting data with other applications using BlueButton on FHIR, increased data accessibility is a win for everyone. Presenters will give an overview of the opportunities and challenges that exist today and share the newest technologies and initiatives that are overcoming them.
The Impact of Telemedicine on Healthcare Key Statistics and Trends (1).pdfQuickblox
QuickBlox was one of the first communication solution providers on the marketplace to offer chat API, recognizing an emerging need for remote real-time communication between parties
United healthcare trends discussion by Frost & SullivanModupe Sarratt
The document discusses key trends, opportunities, and challenges in the healthcare industry related to growth and innovation. It identifies mobility in healthcare/mHealth and cloud computing in healthcare as top hot topics according to survey respondents. The document also summarizes findings regarding telehealth and mHealth markets, consumer views on how these technologies may improve convenience, quality and costs of care, and opportunities to leverage big data, engage consumers, and improve medical device connectivity.
Providers need to move towards real-time analytics that have become critical to demonstrate their quality of care, as reimbursement by government programs can be contingent upon how providers are measured in “Quality of Care”. For example, the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act (MACRA) of 2015, also called the Permanent Doc Fix, changes the way Medicare doctors are reimbursed with the implementation of a merit based incentive. The performance-based pressure is huge, which makes it imperative that every provider consider technology solutions. Read more at https://www.solix.com/solutions/data-driven-solutions/healthcare/
Healthcare data and its impact upon the patient care decision process via accurate, real-time, reliable data from disparate sources is creating a digital health revolution. Data-driven healthcare is beginning to have a huge impact addressing the challenges of every provider, through efficient handling of huge volumes of patient care data.
2015 05 01 Pop Health - Laying the Foundation (00000002)Dana Alexander
This document discusses population health management and outlines four key aspects: data control and governance, population management and risk stratification, care management, and patient engagement. It summarizes the challenges of collecting and analyzing large amounts of patient data from electronic health records, developing risk profiles of patient subgroups, implementing targeted care models, and encouraging patient accountability through new technologies. The overall goal is for healthcare organizations to successfully address these areas and achieve true population health management.
2018 has finally arrived, and healthcare companies’ executives from both small and big firms have hit the ground running. With technological artificial intelligence and new drugs in the industry, below are 6 healthcare predictions for 2018.
2016 IBM Interconnect - medical devices transformationElizabeth Koumpan
Emerging technologies such as Internet of Things, 3D Printing are driving the creation of new business models and forcing the Industry for transformation. The product centric model where the Industry main objective was to develop the device, is moving to software and services model, with the focus on Big Data & Analytics, Integration and Cloud.
The maturation of technologies such as social, mobile, analytics, cloud, 3D printing, bio- and nanotechnology are rapidly shifting the competitive landscape. These emerging technologies create an environment that is connected and open, simple and intelligent, fast and scalable. Organizations must embrace disruptive technologies to drive innovation
Deep Blue Communications is the leader in engineering, installing and supporting hospitality networks that ensure your property opens on time, on budget, with all your technologies working together the way they should - on day one. With over 10 years’ experience, Deep Blue has made the INC 5000 List of the Fastest Growing Companies, emerging as a pioneer in converged networks for properties by seamlessly integrating hospitality, retail and entertainment services. Deep Blue collaborates with you and your technology vendors to design and install the network, manage all 3rd party product integrations and provide ongoing support, streamlining operations with solutions that deliver the best ROI within your budget. We help businesses across the United States, Canada, Mexico and the Caribbean elevate their guest experience. For more information, contact sales@deepbluecommunications.com, call 844-389-2718, or visit www.deepbluecommunications.com.
Pharmaceutical companies have been slow to adopt digital technologies and engage directly with consumers, unlike other industries that have transformed to business-to-consumer models. However, the healthcare system is shifting towards value-based care and consumers are taking a more active role in their healthcare decisions by researching options online. To remain competitive in this new environment and understand consumer needs, pharmaceutical companies will need to leverage real-world data from multiple sources, including electronic health records, social media, claims data, and patient-reported data. Partnerships that allow for integrated analysis of these diverse data sources will help pharmaceutical companies develop effective segmenting and targeting strategies aimed at consumers.
Digital healthcare technologies are transforming healthcare delivery globally. Companies are developing technologies like mobile apps, big data analytics, and smart medical devices to improve patient monitoring and outcomes. These digital innovations extract insights from medical data to enhance healthcare provisioning, reduce costs, and support preventative care and remote patient monitoring. Emerging areas like bioinformatics and medical analytics utilize big data to provide actionable clinical insights.
IDC White Paper - Integrated Patient Record - Empowering Patient Centric Care...buntib
Despite the growing use of electronic health records (EHRs) and health information exchange (HIE) technologies, providers and payers still face challenges with regard to accessing all the information known about a given patient or member. Patient health information can be trapped in siloed healthcare information systems, paper-based documents and processes, or non-machine-readable documents. An integrated view of patient information improves the experience of clinicians by enabling them to better serve their patients, which in turn leads to better outcomes. The ability to create comprehensive patient-centric records is crucial for improving not only quality of care but also patient safety.
Big data is impacting the healthcare industry by enhancing efficiency, increasing productivity, and helping anticipate potential issues. The document outlines how big data plays a role in healthcare through benefits like detecting illnesses early, customized treatment, and reducing waste. It also discusses challenges like privacy concerns, fragmented data from different sources, and ensuring data integrity when sharing information.
This document provides an investment thesis for consumer-driven healthcare startups. The thesis is based on several trends including the aging population, rising healthcare costs, increased consumer demand for flexible healthcare options, and the expansion of social media and technology. The document argues that investments in startups focused on consumer healthcare through technological solutions that leverage data analytics and ensure alignment with consumer lifestyles and affordability will be most likely to succeed. Several example startup opportunities are provided to illustrate the thesis.
The Future Of Health 2014 www.psfk.com/future-of-health / #FutureOfHealth A Foreword PIERS FAWKES Founder & President, PSFK Labs labs.psfk.com Imagine a future where wearable technologies track key areas of your life to provide timely prompts about your health, and the data gathered can be uploaded securely to the cloud. Instead of going into the doctor’s office for a checkup, you would schedule a video consultation to discuss your recent readings. In instances when you need further care, your visits would be coordinated by medical records that flow seamlessly between key members of hospital staff and your care would be supported by relevant information that prepares you for what’s next. Your surgeon would be able to look at your results alongside the wider patient population or seek advice from specialists around the world to determine an optimal treatment plan; the effectiveness of which would determine their compensation. While the realities of the current model of healthcare tell a different story, we’re beginning to see exciting signs of change against daunting challenges. The World Economic Forum estimates that unless current trends reverse, five common ‘lifestyle’ diseases— cancer, diabetes, heart disease, lung disease and mental health problems—will cost the world $47 trillion in treatments and lost wages. Add that figure to a system that could see a shortage of 90,000 doctors in the US alone by the end of the decade, and the picture becomes bleak. Rather than view these as insurmountable obstacles, we choose to see a landscape full of opportunity. Despite a slow regulatory process a host of new mobile and social tools, sensor technologies and devices are being developed for an industry in need of change. These innovations are poised to improve health lifestyle choices and change the way care is delivered. We’re excited to share this patient-centered vision in our latest report.
Are we ready for the next-gen phase of patient marketing in healthcare.pdfJasper Colin
The two emerging models of patient centricity in healthcare: patient outreach and engagement, are being redefined by technology and data explosion.
The proliferation of data-driven systems and technological advances including wearable tech is enabling more personalized patient outreach initiatives. Just take #Microsoft'𝘀 𝗿𝗲𝗰𝗲𝗻𝘁 𝗮𝗻𝗻𝗼𝘂𝗻𝗰𝗲𝗺𝗲𝗻𝘁 𝗼𝗳 𝗗𝗼𝗰𝘁𝗼𝗿 𝗮𝗻𝗱 𝗖𝗹𝗶𝗻𝗶𝗰 𝗔𝗱𝘀, which aims to help healthcare professionals reach targeted patient segments in a revolutionary way.
More mobile phones are sold globally over 24 hours than babies born - the proliferation of mobile phones is now outpacing the human population. It should come as no surprise that the obtaining and sharing of health information thru mobile is projected to grow exponentially. Mobile in fact is the only media time that is currently growing.
No matter the regional or local audience---The creation of mobile strategies and campaigns are inherently vast, encompassing; m.sites, apps, social, banners, SMS/MMS, gaming, QR codes, video, augmented reality and much more.
Given the infinite canvas of mobile marketing, in this presentation we’ll explore the importance of an engaging mobile experience that ultimately adds value and improves the users life.
Mobile is truly an indispensable part of all our lives in this hyper-connected world where 91% of adults have their mobile within arm's reach 24/7. And like never before this is the era of the Mighty Mobile in health, wellness and fitness!
Mental health patients often suffer from multiple health conditions simultaneously, making integrated care that shares information across providers important. As data sources like social media, telemedicine, and wearables grow, patients will play a more active role in their care through shared decision making. Healthcare organizations must embrace mental health, consider the economic benefits of integrated data, and leverage feedback to continuously improve quality care for patients dealing with both physical and mental health issues.
Retaining Healthcare Quality During COVID-19 and Future of Care Delivery. By....Healthcare consultant
With the onset of COVID-19, healthcare delivery organizations around the world were collectively faced with one primary challenge: How to effectively deliver quality healthcare to all patients, regardless of the entry point into the system, while protecting the well-being of non-COVID-19 patients and the healthcare workforce.
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Emotional and Behavioural Problems in Children - Counselling and Family Thera...PsychoTech Services
A proprietary approach developed by bringing together the best of learning theories from Psychology, design principles from the world of visualization, and pedagogical methods from over a decade of training experience, that enables you to: Learn better, faster!
Cancer treatment has advanced significantly over the years, offering patients various options tailored to their specific type of cancer and stage of disease. Understanding the different types of cancer treatments can help patients make informed decisions about their care. In this ppt, we have listed most common forms of cancer treatment available today.
Dr. Sherman Lai, MD — Guelph's Dedicated Medical ProfessionalSherman Lai Guelph
Guelph native Dr. Sherman Lai, MD, is a committed medical practitioner renowned for his thorough medical knowledge and caring patient care. Dr. Lai guarantees that every patient receives the best possible medical care and assistance that is customized to meet their specific needs. She has years of experience and is dedicated to providing individualized health solutions.
Ensure the highest quality care for your patients with Cardiac Registry Support's cancer registry services. We support accreditation efforts and quality improvement initiatives, allowing you to benchmark performance and demonstrate adherence to best practices. Confidence starts with data. Partner with Cardiac Registry Support. For more details visit https://cardiacregistrysupport.com/cancer-registry-services/
The facial nerve, also known as cranial nerve VII, is one of the 12 cranial nerves originating from the brain. It's a mixed nerve, meaning it contains both sensory and motor fibres, and it plays a crucial role in controlling various facial muscles, as well as conveying sensory information from the taste buds on the anterior two-thirds of the tongue.
At Malayali Kerala Spa Ajman we providing the top quality massage services for our customers.
Our massage center prioritizes efficiency to ensure a quality massage experience for our clients at Malayali Kerala Spa Ajman. We offer a convenient appointment system and precise massage services.
Reach us at Villa No 7, Near Ammar Bin Yasir Street Al Rashidiya 2 - Ajman - United Arab Emirates.
Phone : +971 529818279
Digital Health in India_Health Informatics Trained Manpower _DrDevTaneja_15.0...DrDevTaneja1
Digital India will need a big trained army of Health Informatics educated & trained manpower in India.
Presently, generalist IT manpower does most of the work in the healthcare industry in India. Academic Health Informatics education is not readily available at school & health university level or IT education institutions in India.
We look into the evolution of health informatics and its applications in the healthcare industry.
HIMMS TIGER resources are available to assist Health Informatics education.
Indian Health universities, IT Education institutions, and the healthcare industry must proactively collaborate to start health informatics courses on a big scale. An advocacy push from various stakeholders is also needed for this goal.
Health informatics has huge employment potential and provides a big business opportunity for the healthcare industry. A big pool of trained health informatics manpower can lead to product & service innovations on a global scale in India.
VEDANTA AIR AMBULANCE SERVICES IN REWA AT A COST-EFFECTIVE PRICE.pdfVedanta A
Air Ambulance Services In Rewa works in close coordination with ground-based emergency services, including local Emergency Medical Services, fire departments, and law enforcement agencies.
More@: https://tinyurl.com/2shrryhx
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The Ultimate Guide in Setting Up Market Research System in Health-TechGokul Rangarajan
How to effectively start market research in the health tech industry by defining objectives, crafting problem statements, selecting methods, identifying data collection sources, and setting clear timelines. This guide covers all the preliminary steps needed to lay a strong foundation for your research.
"Market Research it too text-booky, I am in the market for a decade, I am living research book" this is what the founder I met on the event claimed, few of my colleagues rolled their eyes. Its true that one cannot over look the real life experience, but one cannot out beat structured gold mine of market research.
Many 0 to 1 startup founders often overlook market research, but this critical step can make or break a venture, especially in health tech.
But Why do they skip it?
Limited resources—time, money, and manpower—are common culprits.
"In fact, a survey by CB Insights found that 42% of startups fail due to no market need, which is like building a spaceship to Mars only to realise you forgot the fuel."
Sudharsan Srinivasan
Operational Partner Pitchworks VC Studio
Overconfidence in their product’s success leads founders to assume it will naturally find its market, especially in health tech where patient needs, entire system issues and regulatory requirements are as complex as trying to perform brain surgery with a butter knife. Additionally, the pressure to launch quickly and the belief in their own intuition further contribute to this oversight. Yet, thorough market research in health tech could be the key to transforming a startup's vision into a life-saving reality, instead of a medical mishap waiting to happen.
Example of Market Research working
Innovaccer, founded by Abhinav Shashank in 2014, focuses on improving healthcare delivery through data-driven insights and interoperability solutions. Before launching their platform, Innovaccer conducted extensive market research to understand the challenges faced by healthcare organizations and the potential for innovation in healthcare IT.
Identifying Pain Points: Innovaccer surveyed healthcare providers to understand their difficulties with data integration, care coordination, and patient engagement. They found widespread frustration with siloed systems and inefficient workflows.
Competitive Analysis: Analyzed competitors offering similar solutions in healthcare analytics and interoperability. Identified gaps in comprehensive data aggregation, real-time analytics, and actionable insights.
Regulatory Compliance: Ensured their platform complied with HIPAA and other healthcare data privacy regulations. This compliance was crucial to gaining trust from healthcare providers wary of data security issues.
Customer Validation: Conducted pilot programs with several healthcare organizations to validate the platform's effectiveness in improving care outcomes and operational efficiency. Gathered feedback to refine features and user interface.
Sectional dentures for microstomia patients.pptxSatvikaPrasad
Microstomia, characterized by an abnormally small oral aperture, presents significant challenges in prosthodontic treatment, including limited access for examination, difficulties in impression making, and challenges with prosthesis insertion and removal. To manage these issues, customized impression techniques using sectional trays and elastomeric materials are employed. Prostheses may be designed in segments or with flexible materials to facilitate handling. Minimally invasive procedures and the use of digital technologies can enhance patient comfort. Education and training for patients on prosthesis care and maintenance are crucial for compliance. Regular follow-up and a multidisciplinary approach, involving collaboration with other specialists, ensure comprehensive care and improved quality of life for microstomia patients.
Research, Monitoring and Evaluation, in Public Healthaghedogodday
This is a presentation on the overview of the role of monitoring and evaluation in public health. It describes the various components and how a robust M&E system can possitively impact the results or effectiveness of a public health intervention.
Satisfying Spa Massage Experience at Just 99 AED - Malayali Kerala Spa AjmanMalayali Kerala Spa Ajman
Our Spa Massage Center Ajman prioritizes efficiency to ensure a satisfying massage experience for our clients at Malayali Kerala Spa Ajman. We offer a hassle-free appointment system, effective health issue identification, and precise massage techniques.
Our Spa in Ajman stands out for its effectiveness in enhancing wellness. Our therapists focus on treating the root cause of issues, providing tailored treatments for each client. We take pride in offering the most satisfying Pakistani Spa service, adjusting treatment plans based on client feedback.
For the most result-oriented Russian Spa treatment in Ajman, visit our Massage Center. Our Russian therapists are skilled in various techniques to address health concerns. Our body-to-body massage is efficient due to individualized care and high-grade massage oils.
Correlation between surface motion and heart-breast distance for breast cance...
The New IT Drives Healthcare Transformation
1. ITDrives T H E NEW
Healthcare
Transformation
Global healthcare policy and operations are migrating
from volume-based and hospital-centric to value-based
and patient-centric.
Mobility, big data analytics, cloud, and social media are
critical to this transformation.
Mobility and mHealth
Individuals and their families expect that personal health information can be
uploaded, accessed, and shared quickly, accurately, and privately.
TODAY TOMORROW
Consumer interest in mobile
technology for healthcare purposes
is growing rapidly.
48%
of consumers say
mHealth will
improve their
quality of care
mHealth will be critical to preventive
care, empowering individuals to
monitor their health.
46%
of consumers
believe mHealth
apps will
substantially
reduce their
healthcare costs
Big Data
Healthcare organizations are turning to big data for predictive and prescriptive
analytics solutions.
TODAY TOMORROW
Payers manage costs by sifting
through mountains of digital data to
preempt catastrophic health events.
Providers will use genomic profiles
to provide individual insights and
make precision medicine a reality.
Patient monitoring
equipment pumps
out an average of
1,000
readings per second,
or86,400 or604,800
readings in
one day,
readings in
one week
and that’s just
for one patient!
88%
of physicians
would like patients
to track or
monitor their
health at home
Cloud
Healthcare organizations will rely on cloud technology to store, share, and
analyze data.
TODAY TOMORROW
Coordinated patient care is
predicated upon shared access to
health information.
Cloud storage will be a requirement,
not an option, due to the enormous
volume of available data.
37%
of healthcare
organizations have
developed a
written strategic
plan for adoption
of cloud computing
Social Media
Individuals are turning to social networks for health information, peer feedback,
and treatment options.
TODAY TOMORROW
Individuals and clinicians learn from
the treatment experiences of their
peers via social media.
40% 90%
of consumers say
that information
found via social
media influences
how they think
about their health
40%
of healthcare
organizations plan
to move
of their enterprise
communications
to the cloud
>75%
Medical information will be shared
with family members or other
caregivers. This shift is already
underway.
of survey
respondents (18–24)
trust medical
information shared
across social media
networks
VIEW THE FULL REPORT
http://www.hp.com/enterprise/healthcare
SOURCES
• Frost & Sullivan research.
• The Economist Intelligence Unit (2012) and PWC: Emerging mHealth: Paths for Growth (2013).
• http://www.healthcareitleaders.com/blog/infographic-big-data-in-healthcare/
• http://www.slideshare.net/RockHealth/rock-report-business-models-in-digital-health-by-rockhealth
• http://getreferralmd.com/2013/09/healthcare-social-media-statistics/#sthash.jGyNmA1Y.dpuf
• http://getreferralmd.com/2013/09/healthcare-social-media-statistics/#sthash.1Pwbo3Ce.dpuf