Dr George Margelis
Intel Health
Intel Australia
(P25, 17/10/08, Home & Personal Technology stream, 1.30pm)
The video on slide 3 is available on YouTube:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=jbvmGqmIxXY
Hardman 1 tele health bridge strategy 2.0 Samantha Haas
Telehealth can help mitigate risks, manage costs and improve quality of care through targeted approaches like pay for performance programs, bundled pricing models, and shared savings arrangements. A telehealth strategy connects various care providers through data sharing and analytic services to better support value-based care, population health management, and care coordination across settings from acute to post-acute care.
With this presentation, the objective was to explain to an IT industry audience what eHealth, mHealth and telehealth is, not from an IT but an healthcare transformation perspective.
Upcoming Webinar: Building Value from Mobile Health (mHealth)Nous Infosystems
1) The growth of mobility and emphasis on cutting healthcare costs is driving a larger role for mobility in patient care, payers, and providers. Physicians are recommending mobile health apps to patients.
2) As wearables and the Internet of Things continue to grow, mobility will have an even more profound impact across payers and providers. A study found 30% of smartphone users will use wellness apps by 2015 and smartphones are the most popular device among doctors after stethoscopes.
3) Join a webinar on June 24th to learn about the impact of mobility in healthcare across payers and providers, typical payer use cases to drive patient engagement, use cases to manage costs and improve outcomes
Year after year, technology has played a role in changing the way that health care is delivered. Now in 2014, as technology continues to advance, consumers are demanding more convenient and cost effective care through increased use of mHealth and Telehealth. The mHealth + Telehealth World 2014 is must attend event for health care executives interested in learning how to most efficiently utilize Telehealth programs and mHealth practices to improve patient outcomes by promoting interoperability, sustainability, provider interest, and consumer engagement. Hear case studies, understand the ROI, and discuss ways to address critical issues – including licensing and security issues – of digital health practices.
http://www.worldcongress.com/events/HL14028/
This document discusses the transition from eHealth to mHealth and Cisco's strategy in healthcare IT. It describes three waves of healthcare IT: automation of administrative systems in the first wave from 1995 to 2005; digitization of clinical processes like electronic medical records in the second wave from 2005 to 2015; and using information for predictive modeling, decision support, and remote patient monitoring in the third wave from 2015 onward. It outlines challenges like an aging population, provider shortages, and rising costs that are driving new uses of IT. The document presents examples of Cisco's eHealth and mHealth solutions that deliver clinical content anytime, anywhere via multiple devices to improve care quality, access, and experiences for providers, payers, and patients.
The document discusses developing an enterprise mHealth strategy. It outlines assessing the current mHealth environment and stakeholder needs. It then proposes a methodology for crafting a vision, evaluating requirements, and developing a strategic plan through workshops with various constituents to achieve consensus on standards, technical architecture, and an implementation plan. The goal is an integrated mHealth approach that plugs selected products into a sound technology and business model.
Beyond telehealth: Maximizing value based care - Robin Wiener, Get Real Healt...VSee
What is a platform-based patient portal? Why is it important for maximizing value based care? - from the Telehealth Failures & Secrets To Success Conference:
vsee.com/telehealth-failures-conference
Hardman 1 tele health bridge strategy 2.0 Samantha Haas
Telehealth can help mitigate risks, manage costs and improve quality of care through targeted approaches like pay for performance programs, bundled pricing models, and shared savings arrangements. A telehealth strategy connects various care providers through data sharing and analytic services to better support value-based care, population health management, and care coordination across settings from acute to post-acute care.
With this presentation, the objective was to explain to an IT industry audience what eHealth, mHealth and telehealth is, not from an IT but an healthcare transformation perspective.
Upcoming Webinar: Building Value from Mobile Health (mHealth)Nous Infosystems
1) The growth of mobility and emphasis on cutting healthcare costs is driving a larger role for mobility in patient care, payers, and providers. Physicians are recommending mobile health apps to patients.
2) As wearables and the Internet of Things continue to grow, mobility will have an even more profound impact across payers and providers. A study found 30% of smartphone users will use wellness apps by 2015 and smartphones are the most popular device among doctors after stethoscopes.
3) Join a webinar on June 24th to learn about the impact of mobility in healthcare across payers and providers, typical payer use cases to drive patient engagement, use cases to manage costs and improve outcomes
Year after year, technology has played a role in changing the way that health care is delivered. Now in 2014, as technology continues to advance, consumers are demanding more convenient and cost effective care through increased use of mHealth and Telehealth. The mHealth + Telehealth World 2014 is must attend event for health care executives interested in learning how to most efficiently utilize Telehealth programs and mHealth practices to improve patient outcomes by promoting interoperability, sustainability, provider interest, and consumer engagement. Hear case studies, understand the ROI, and discuss ways to address critical issues – including licensing and security issues – of digital health practices.
http://www.worldcongress.com/events/HL14028/
This document discusses the transition from eHealth to mHealth and Cisco's strategy in healthcare IT. It describes three waves of healthcare IT: automation of administrative systems in the first wave from 1995 to 2005; digitization of clinical processes like electronic medical records in the second wave from 2005 to 2015; and using information for predictive modeling, decision support, and remote patient monitoring in the third wave from 2015 onward. It outlines challenges like an aging population, provider shortages, and rising costs that are driving new uses of IT. The document presents examples of Cisco's eHealth and mHealth solutions that deliver clinical content anytime, anywhere via multiple devices to improve care quality, access, and experiences for providers, payers, and patients.
The document discusses developing an enterprise mHealth strategy. It outlines assessing the current mHealth environment and stakeholder needs. It then proposes a methodology for crafting a vision, evaluating requirements, and developing a strategic plan through workshops with various constituents to achieve consensus on standards, technical architecture, and an implementation plan. The goal is an integrated mHealth approach that plugs selected products into a sound technology and business model.
Beyond telehealth: Maximizing value based care - Robin Wiener, Get Real Healt...VSee
What is a platform-based patient portal? Why is it important for maximizing value based care? - from the Telehealth Failures & Secrets To Success Conference:
vsee.com/telehealth-failures-conference
How value based care is changing telehealth payment modelsVSee
The document summarizes telehealth reimbursement policies across different payers including Medicaid, Medicare, and private insurers. It provides statistics on how many states reimburse for different telehealth services through Medicaid and cover telehealth for state employees. The document also discusses Medicare reimbursement guidelines and initiatives to expand coverage. Additional sections cover the Medicare Quality Payment Program and various payment models being tested through the CMS Innovation Center. Private insurance telehealth policies and potential telehealth revenue models are also addressed.
Telemedicine involves using telecommunication technologies to provide and support healthcare from a distance. It is defined as the use of electronic information and communication technologies to provide medical services when participants are separated by location. There are three main types of telemedicine: store-and-forward, interactive services, and remote monitoring. Some applications of telemedicine include remote consultation, remote monitoring, remote education, and tele-mentoring. Telemedicine can improve access to care, quality of care through collaborative decision making, reduce isolation of healthcare professionals, and reduce costs by decreasing travel needs and optimizing resource use. However, telemedicine itself is just a means of delivery and the effective healthcare depends on the content provided, not the technology.
CareClix is the leading telemedicine providers Worldwide. Now the Patients can see their doctors from home via the electronic devices and physicians at CareClix examine the multiple patients at the same time with CareClix Medical Examination room.
Telemedicine uses telecommunication and information technologies to provide clinical healthcare remotely. It allows communication between patients and medical staff for both convenience and transmission of medical data. Telemedicine works through video conferencing systems between hub and remote sites connected by technologies like T1 lines, satellites, or the internet. It has benefits like improved access to care and quality of care through collaborative consultations, but faces barriers like costs of equipment and connectivity as well as reimbursement issues. The technologies and applications of telemedicine continue to evolve to better serve patients.
Telemedicine uses telecommunications technology to provide healthcare services from a distance. It can involve real-time video consultations between providers and patients, or storing and forwarding medical images and data for offline review. While telemedicine has benefits like improving access to specialists in rural areas, it still faces barriers like high infrastructure costs, lack of standards and regulations, and reimbursement issues. As technologies improve and costs decrease, telemedicine has great potential to expand healthcare access.
The document provides an overview of ASP.NET MVC, including its core components and how they differ from ASP.NET Web Forms. It discusses Models, Views, Controllers, validation, routing, unit testing, and view engines. Key points covered include MVC separating application logic, control over HTML, testability, and no viewstate or postbacks. Examples are provided for creating controllers and actions, passing data to views, validation, routing, and unit testing.