The document proposes the HealthTracker, a personalized healthcare management system that would give individuals control over and assistance with managing their own healthcare through a mobile application. It would sync with biomedical clothing to extract health data and provide medical knowledge to help users take control of their wellness. The product could effectively relieve burden on healthcare systems while reinforcing the growing market for mobile health applications. Funding is being sought to research and develop the interface and biomedical clothing to fully test the commercial potential of the HealthTracker concept.
Telehealth Protocols to Create Competitive AdvantageRoger Smith
Telehealth apps have arrived on the smartphone. What can they make of that position? What services are needed by patients?Who will become the Facebook of telehealth?
10 m health startups to watch out for in 2016Annanya Johari
Healthcare technolgy startups are booming. Here is a look at some of those which are expected to create waves in the medical technology area in the coming years.
Telehealth Protocols to Create Competitive AdvantageRoger Smith
Telehealth apps have arrived on the smartphone. What can they make of that position? What services are needed by patients?Who will become the Facebook of telehealth?
10 m health startups to watch out for in 2016Annanya Johari
Healthcare technolgy startups are booming. Here is a look at some of those which are expected to create waves in the medical technology area in the coming years.
My presentation slides from IxDA Helsinki meetup at Dynamo & Son, spring 2016. Went there to talk about the latest trends in digital health and talked a few things about Oma Terveys, a health care service platform with which I've worked on recently.
Best healthcare startups to watch for 2019insightscare
We have come up with ‘Best Healthcare Startups to Watch for 2019’ issue in which we have introduced the leading organizations that are spearheading the healthcare field with their innovative services and solutions.
The I-DOCTOR App-Final project iiml internship winter 19th dec to 15th janSneh Ankur
This is marketing plan of an android app named I-Doctor submitted by Sneh Ankur, Btech (C.S.E) , NIT Agartala which was done during a marketing winter internship under Prof> Sameer Marthur, marketing professor, IIM Lucknow
Mike Kenny - Digital Innovation: the art of the possible.Innovation Agency
Presentation by Mike Kenny, Associate Commercial Director, Innovation Agency: Digital Innovation: the art of the possible on Wednesday 13 March 2019 at Haydock Park Racecourse.
Marketing Plan for App - "Doctor Uncle"Vishrut Shah
This presentation contains a detailed marketing plan of an application for the company "Doctor Uncle". It gives you an executive summary and situational analysis. It also mentions its goals, and strategies and tactics that it will use to attain them
The biggest disruptions in Indian B2C e-commerce systems so far have happened in the areas of
- “Roti, (remember the times when we had 10’s of menus stored in a drawer for ordering)
- Kapda, aur (this refers to apparel and e-commerce in general)
- Makaan (there was a time when the sole flow of information came from the brokers)”
Of course, there are other areas now which have seen innovation (like daily transport etc.)
While this part is understandable, what is baffling is how much healthcare has been left behind from a consumer’s perspective.
Best healthcare startups to watch for 2019insightscare
The ability of advanced technologies in solving a wide range of issues for patients, hospitals, and the healthcare industry is the impulse behind its sudden rising implementation in healthcare.With this regard, we have come up with ‘Best Healthcare Startups to Watch for 2019’ issue in which we have introduced the leading organizations that are spearheading the healthcare field with their innovative services and solutions.
Small Screens, Big Changes: Frontiers in Mobile Technology for Nutrition, Hea...Lisa Gualtieri
Will Masters, Professor and Chair, Department of Food and Nutrition Policy, Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy at Tufts University, invited me to moderate a panel on Feb 26, 2014 on mobile health. Panelists Charles Teague, LoseIt!, Nick Patel, Wellable, and Neal Lesh, Dimagi, were fantastic. They gave me permission to post their slides, which end with the questions I prepared:
1.My mother-in-law downloaded LoseIt and wants to know how it takes into consideration your age and physical ability to exercise? The broader question here is:
–How are all people accommodated and when is it okay for a specific demographics' needs to be met be in age, location, or health condition?
2.From Twitter: Why does LoseIt treat iPhone users better than Android? Larger question:
–What is the impact of the changes in technology: cell phones, smart phones, tablets etc on your products?
3.What would a healthcare provider need to know to "prescribe" your app? Why would someone "adhere" to that prescription?
4.If you had unlimited funds what would you each do in the next year?
I wish I had documented all their excellent and insightful answers.
Interested in Mobile Health - consider Mobile Health Design course http://publichealth.tufts.edu/Academics/HCOM-Program/Summer-Institute/Mobile-Health-Design
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
Unprecedented Technological Trends Push the Envelope in Life SciencesCognizant
The life sciences and pharmaceuticals industry is facing startling digitizational changes on many levels, with these five key technology trends setting the pace: bundling products and services, edge analytics, human augmentation, automation and AI, and patient data ownership.
My presentation slides from IxDA Helsinki meetup at Dynamo & Son, spring 2016. Went there to talk about the latest trends in digital health and talked a few things about Oma Terveys, a health care service platform with which I've worked on recently.
Best healthcare startups to watch for 2019insightscare
We have come up with ‘Best Healthcare Startups to Watch for 2019’ issue in which we have introduced the leading organizations that are spearheading the healthcare field with their innovative services and solutions.
The I-DOCTOR App-Final project iiml internship winter 19th dec to 15th janSneh Ankur
This is marketing plan of an android app named I-Doctor submitted by Sneh Ankur, Btech (C.S.E) , NIT Agartala which was done during a marketing winter internship under Prof> Sameer Marthur, marketing professor, IIM Lucknow
Mike Kenny - Digital Innovation: the art of the possible.Innovation Agency
Presentation by Mike Kenny, Associate Commercial Director, Innovation Agency: Digital Innovation: the art of the possible on Wednesday 13 March 2019 at Haydock Park Racecourse.
Marketing Plan for App - "Doctor Uncle"Vishrut Shah
This presentation contains a detailed marketing plan of an application for the company "Doctor Uncle". It gives you an executive summary and situational analysis. It also mentions its goals, and strategies and tactics that it will use to attain them
The biggest disruptions in Indian B2C e-commerce systems so far have happened in the areas of
- “Roti, (remember the times when we had 10’s of menus stored in a drawer for ordering)
- Kapda, aur (this refers to apparel and e-commerce in general)
- Makaan (there was a time when the sole flow of information came from the brokers)”
Of course, there are other areas now which have seen innovation (like daily transport etc.)
While this part is understandable, what is baffling is how much healthcare has been left behind from a consumer’s perspective.
Best healthcare startups to watch for 2019insightscare
The ability of advanced technologies in solving a wide range of issues for patients, hospitals, and the healthcare industry is the impulse behind its sudden rising implementation in healthcare.With this regard, we have come up with ‘Best Healthcare Startups to Watch for 2019’ issue in which we have introduced the leading organizations that are spearheading the healthcare field with their innovative services and solutions.
Small Screens, Big Changes: Frontiers in Mobile Technology for Nutrition, Hea...Lisa Gualtieri
Will Masters, Professor and Chair, Department of Food and Nutrition Policy, Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy at Tufts University, invited me to moderate a panel on Feb 26, 2014 on mobile health. Panelists Charles Teague, LoseIt!, Nick Patel, Wellable, and Neal Lesh, Dimagi, were fantastic. They gave me permission to post their slides, which end with the questions I prepared:
1.My mother-in-law downloaded LoseIt and wants to know how it takes into consideration your age and physical ability to exercise? The broader question here is:
–How are all people accommodated and when is it okay for a specific demographics' needs to be met be in age, location, or health condition?
2.From Twitter: Why does LoseIt treat iPhone users better than Android? Larger question:
–What is the impact of the changes in technology: cell phones, smart phones, tablets etc on your products?
3.What would a healthcare provider need to know to "prescribe" your app? Why would someone "adhere" to that prescription?
4.If you had unlimited funds what would you each do in the next year?
I wish I had documented all their excellent and insightful answers.
Interested in Mobile Health - consider Mobile Health Design course http://publichealth.tufts.edu/Academics/HCOM-Program/Summer-Institute/Mobile-Health-Design
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
Unprecedented Technological Trends Push the Envelope in Life SciencesCognizant
The life sciences and pharmaceuticals industry is facing startling digitizational changes on many levels, with these five key technology trends setting the pace: bundling products and services, edge analytics, human augmentation, automation and AI, and patient data ownership.
Digital Health Success Stories Report - Part 1Tom Parsons
Part 1 of HealthXL’s ‘Digital Health Success Stories’ report is now available and delves into some of the recent successes in healthcare technology and asks the experts what it all means.
An abundance of data is allowing CMOs and CIOs to innovate in new ways, to create highly targeted, personalised products and services. But how do they win the digital trust of their customers in order to innovate? And how do they harness that data without putting people’s private information at risk?
Download our new research paper, The Digital Trust Paradox: The Key to Product Innovation via Big Data, to find out how digital trust is essential when it comes to innovation and how CIOs and CMOs can work together to earn it.
The new research paper, exclusive to BVEx, includes research into consumer attitudes and sentiment on sharing personal and private data and reveals how opportunities to innovate can only exist if a well-defined value exchange is in place. Consumers, savvy to marketing tactics, will only share their data when they receive something of concrete utility in return. For example, this could be self-knowledge or new and helpful services. Once this utility has been achieved, a circle of trust or 'digital trust', forms and opportunities to innovate can occur.
14th Cairo Marketing Club (Digital World for Pharma) by Dr. Fayza Elshatby & ...Mahmoud Bahgat
14th Cairo Marketing Club (Digital World for Pharma) by Dr. Fayza Elshatby & Dr.Mahmoud Hamdy
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HealthXL Digital Health Success Stories Report Part OneMaeve Lyons
Part 1 of HealthXL’s ‘Digital Health Success Stories’ report is now available and delves into some of the recent successes in medical tech and asks the experts what it all means.
Key Points:
Multi-million dollar investments don’t always mean success. Success looks different to each stakeholder involved in digital health.
The winners in digital health will be those who provide real solutions to problems at a reduced cost.
Part 1 of HealthXL’s ‘Digital Health Success Stories’ report comprises an in-depth view of the progress of digital health, case studies, along with opinion from some key players in the industry.
Digital health empowers us with ways to improve outcomes and increase efficiency.
Part 2 of our report will look at how we can learn from failures in digital health, available [when available and how to access].
Innovating for health mObile Health perspectiveRuchi Dass
In the face of the enormous challenges of managing chronic diseases, delivery innovations appear to have the most impact when multiple parties (e.g., physicians, nurses, payors) interact seamlessly to provide the best possible patient care over an extended period of time. Such integrated models have the potential to reduce costs dramatically, while increasing patient satisfaction and clinical quality
Imitating traditional development paths is impossible for emerging economies. The World Economic Forum, in collaboration with BCG, suggests that health systems in emerging economies need to make the right investments now to avoid problems that developed economies have encountered.
Observations and inspirations from the Ogilvy CommonHealth Worldwide team that attended SXSW Interactive 2015 in Austin. From digital health and wearables to predictive analytics and robots, our team saw it all. Here we present the trends we saw and key takeaways from select sessions.
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.
mHealth India- bringing telcos and providers together
Health trackerpresentation2
1. HealthTrackerThe Ultimate Healthcare Tracking Assistant Hi, my name is Holly McDowell, and my product is the HeathTracker which is a personalised healthcare management system
2.
3. Enable individuals to develop and test the commercial potential of a concept resulting from in-house research and ideas.
4.
5. 4 Studies show that 500 million people will be using mobile health care apps by 2015 Research shows 13% of the UK population are interested in looking after their own wellness
6. Product Info 5 What is it? The Health Tracker can offer people the medical knowledge they need to fulfil their need to control their own personal healthcare How? Offers endless possibilities for controlling and assisting users
7. Offer opportunities for companies in the healthcare field, i.e. Doctors and patients exchanging info. Could effectively relieve burden on the NHS Nike+ have said they are actively looking for acquisition in markets where it is under-penetrated. 6
8. I want to change the way people see healthcare applications Providing them with a system that could change the quality and length of their life 7 What I want to do!
9. 8 Objectives of what I want to do Research and development of an interface Research surrounding possible solutions for wearable computing and applications Development and research of biomedical clothing which can be synced with Apple’s iPhone Data Refinement and how we will extract the data from the biomedical clothing to the iPhone.
10. 9 The Health Tracker can allow the user to be both the researcher and the subject. Gaining the knowledge they need to change their lifestyle Reinforce the healthcare application market Conclusion
11. Finally... 10 I would like to ask for a follow up meeting to discuss the endless business possibilities that the Health Tracker can provide. Thank-You for listening.
Editor's Notes
We control just about every aspect of our lives.Mobile devices, technology and software have given us a greater choice on how, when and where we live our lives. We can choose to do our banking at 1am in our pyjamas, we can locate the nearest bar/restaurant and instantly get the menu or book a table, all made possible with mobile technology.However when it comes to our own healthcare, we seem powerless and less organised. The NHS provides us with an excellent service to meet our needs but what if we could develop our sense for control and focus it on remote healthcare?
Studies show 500 million people will be using mobile healthcare apps by 2015. There are currently around 6000 apps aimed at fitness, health and medical genres on Apple’s App Store.Research has shown 13% of us in the UK are actively engaged in looking after out on personal well-being through exercising regularly, taking temperature readings, blood pressure readings, recording our health statistics in a variety of places and having to manually take readings.
The HealthTracker can change how a person looks at and manages their personal healthcare. It is designed to assist people in managing their onw healthcare using biomedical clothing and telemedicine in the form of an app for iPhone.The HealthTracker makes it simple to manage health, the user simply puts on the biomedical item of clothing, which gathers and stores their health statistics until the user wirelessly connects the clothing to their app. The app appears with a model of the users body and through colour theory and graphics the user is able to click on various parts of the body to reveal statistics, charts, information and positive tips on the users healthcare.
I want to change the way people see healthcare applications. I want this system to deliver accurate up-to-date readings and data on things like blood pressure, weight, ECG, skin temperature in order for the user to collect data on their own healthcare, analyse it, look for patterns and information that could change both the quality and the length of their life.
The HealthTracker allows the user to be both the researcher and the subject. The user is actively observing themselves, gaining information that they can act on and then actively modify their lifestyle. Keeping track of our health is nothing new but the HealthTracker offers to do it in a new easy and inventive way.