MobileTrends Maj 2014, mHealth, Smartfon na zdrowieConnectmedica
Wykład Igor Gnot i Doriana Szymańskiego na MobileTrends Maj 2014 w Krakowie. Dotyczy trendów, w tym Internet of things, Wearables, Ubicomps w medycynie i zdrowiu.
This document discusses the growing market for mobile health (mHealth) technologies. It notes that the mHealth market is growing rapidly due to factors like increasing smartphone and tablet use, demands from patients and doctors, and a focus on patient-centered care. Mobile technologies can help address challenges in healthcare like staff shortages and rising costs by improving efficiency and access to care. The document provides examples of popular mHealth solutions and opportunities in areas like patient engagement, remote monitoring, and hospital administration. It also discusses barriers to adoption like data privacy concerns and potential costs.
This document discusses the use of mobile phones for healthcare and public health initiatives, known as mHealth. It details the 12 main clusters of mHealth applications, including patient communication, access to web-based resources, point-of-care tools, disease management, education, and more. The document examines how widespread mobile phone ownership is globally and among different populations. It argues that mHealth offers opportunities to improve individual and population health as well as address disparities, but that barriers still exist that must be overcome for successful initiatives.
Rock Report: Personalization in Consumer Health by @Rock_HealthRock Health
Overview of personalization in healthcare, including opportunities, barriers and case studies related to a market estimated to reach $450B+ by 2015. Purchase the report here: https://gumroad.com/l/XxcA
mHealth and Digital Masters : Novartis Vs KodakJoseph Pategou
During years, pharma companies have been trying to bring more value to patients and physicians by using mHealth.
In this study we observed the consequences of a slow transition to digital on a leader in his sector (Novartis Vs Kodak). We also think that pharma companies need to move from mHealth to Digital Masters to bring the best value to all stakeholders.
Some facts:
Digital Masters outperform their peers*
-26% more profitable than their average industry competitors
-9% percent more revenue with their existing physical capacity
-More efficiency in their existing products and processes
-More Productivity
(*): LEADING DIGITAL: Turning technology into business transformation, Havard Business Review press
Learn more about Monty C. M. Metzger at http://blog.monty.de/keynote-speaker
Contact me at monty (at) aheadoftime (dot) de
Mobile Health (mHealth)
What are the key trends in mHealth? What are the best example and cases of mHealth today?
What role will the mobile phone play for the health, pharma and medicine industry? And what can your cell phone do for your personal health?
This document discusses managing IT, telecommunications, personal data rules, and software regulatory requirements in the EU and global environment, including case studies. It covers the EU political context regarding eHealth initiatives and changes to regulations for medicinal products, medical devices, and health data protection. Specific issues addressed include the proposed General Data Protection Regulation, regulation of software as medical devices, reimbursement, licensing, and liability in cross-border healthcare and eHealth. A case study is also presented.
MobileTrends Maj 2014, mHealth, Smartfon na zdrowieConnectmedica
Wykład Igor Gnot i Doriana Szymańskiego na MobileTrends Maj 2014 w Krakowie. Dotyczy trendów, w tym Internet of things, Wearables, Ubicomps w medycynie i zdrowiu.
This document discusses the growing market for mobile health (mHealth) technologies. It notes that the mHealth market is growing rapidly due to factors like increasing smartphone and tablet use, demands from patients and doctors, and a focus on patient-centered care. Mobile technologies can help address challenges in healthcare like staff shortages and rising costs by improving efficiency and access to care. The document provides examples of popular mHealth solutions and opportunities in areas like patient engagement, remote monitoring, and hospital administration. It also discusses barriers to adoption like data privacy concerns and potential costs.
This document discusses the use of mobile phones for healthcare and public health initiatives, known as mHealth. It details the 12 main clusters of mHealth applications, including patient communication, access to web-based resources, point-of-care tools, disease management, education, and more. The document examines how widespread mobile phone ownership is globally and among different populations. It argues that mHealth offers opportunities to improve individual and population health as well as address disparities, but that barriers still exist that must be overcome for successful initiatives.
Rock Report: Personalization in Consumer Health by @Rock_HealthRock Health
Overview of personalization in healthcare, including opportunities, barriers and case studies related to a market estimated to reach $450B+ by 2015. Purchase the report here: https://gumroad.com/l/XxcA
mHealth and Digital Masters : Novartis Vs KodakJoseph Pategou
During years, pharma companies have been trying to bring more value to patients and physicians by using mHealth.
In this study we observed the consequences of a slow transition to digital on a leader in his sector (Novartis Vs Kodak). We also think that pharma companies need to move from mHealth to Digital Masters to bring the best value to all stakeholders.
Some facts:
Digital Masters outperform their peers*
-26% more profitable than their average industry competitors
-9% percent more revenue with their existing physical capacity
-More efficiency in their existing products and processes
-More Productivity
(*): LEADING DIGITAL: Turning technology into business transformation, Havard Business Review press
Learn more about Monty C. M. Metzger at http://blog.monty.de/keynote-speaker
Contact me at monty (at) aheadoftime (dot) de
Mobile Health (mHealth)
What are the key trends in mHealth? What are the best example and cases of mHealth today?
What role will the mobile phone play for the health, pharma and medicine industry? And what can your cell phone do for your personal health?
This document discusses managing IT, telecommunications, personal data rules, and software regulatory requirements in the EU and global environment, including case studies. It covers the EU political context regarding eHealth initiatives and changes to regulations for medicinal products, medical devices, and health data protection. Specific issues addressed include the proposed General Data Protection Regulation, regulation of software as medical devices, reimbursement, licensing, and liability in cross-border healthcare and eHealth. A case study is also presented.
Romanticism emerged in Europe between 1775-1830 in response to industrialization and rise of democratic ideals. It valued emotion, nature, medievalism, individualism and nationalism. Major European Romantic artists and philosophers included Goethe, Wordsworth, and Kant. American Romanticism was influenced by these ideals and emerged through Transcendentalism and the Hudson River School of landscape painting. Famous American Romantic artists included Copley, Leutze, Hicks, Stuart, and Bierstadt who depicted American landscapes, history, and ideals of individualism.
This document provides an introduction to rhetorical analysis. It defines rhetoric as the art of persuasion and rhetorical analysis as breaking down persuasive texts to understand how their parts fit together. The document discusses the rhetorical situation, appeals (logos, ethos, pathos), tone, organization/structure, and surface features. It also provides a brief history of rhetoric from ancient Israel and Greece to its development by the Sophists, Plato, Aristotle, and Romans. Finally, it outlines Aristotle's five canons of rhetoric: invention, arrangement, style, memory, and delivery.
Rhetoric refers to persuasive language used to influence audiences. Effective rhetoric uses three appeals: ethos establishes the writer's credibility; pathos appeals to emotions; and logos uses facts and logic. Together these appeals can combine to craft persuasive messages tailored to specific audiences.
Lois is hosting a give-away party on Sunday, June 24 from 5-7 pm at her apartment located at Ege Universitesi lojmanlari, Blok C, #11. Guests should take the Evka 3 Metro station and walk downhill towards Ege U, turning left past Konuk Evi ve Lojmanlari to find the first building on the right with stairs and a ramp in back. Lois can be contacted via email or phone to RSVP for the party so she knows how many refreshments to prepare.
This document provides an overview of Reconstruction in the US following the Civil War. It discusses the presidency of Ulysses S. Grant, the 15th Amendment granting Black men the right to vote, and the split over women's suffrage. It also summarizes the experiences of freed slaves, the rise and fall of Republican state governments in the South during Reconstruction, and the eventual "redemption" of Southern states by Democrats which reversed Reconstruction policies.
This document provides an overview of key events and developments during the US Civil War and Reconstruction era from 1861 to 1870. It discusses major battles of the Civil War, the Emancipation Proclamation, treatment of fugitive slaves who fled to Union lines, Sherman's March to the Sea in 1864, and the surrender at Appomattox in 1865. It also summarizes President Lincoln's and Congress's differing plans for Reconstruction, the passage of the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments, and the establishment of the Freedmen's Bureau to aid freed slaves.
This document provides a summary of key events and developments in the United States leading up to and during the American Civil War from the 1850s to the 1860s. It outlines the political crises over slavery and states' rights that increased sectional tensions between the North and South. It discusses pivotal court cases like Dred Scott v. Sandford and events like the raid on Harper's Ferry that further divided the nation. The document also summarizes the secession of Southern states, the outbreak of the Civil War after the attack on Fort Sumter, and how the war expanded the powers of the federal government and ultimately led to the Emancipation Proclamation freeing millions of enslaved people.
This US history survey document discusses social change and reform between the 1830s-1850s. It summarizes key immigration trends of Irish and Germans fleeing famine and revolution. It also discusses the abolition, women's rights, and temperance reform movements. The document provides details on leaders like the Grimke sisters and William Lloyd Garrison and conventions like the first women's rights convention in Seneca Falls in 1848. It announces an upcoming midterm exam and offers options for studying or meeting with the professor.
This document summarizes key events of US expansion and the Mexican-American War between 1830-1853:
1) It describes the forced removal of Native American tribes like the Cherokee to lands west of the Mississippi River, known as the "Trail of Tears", as well as the annexation of Texas and war with Mexico that added new western territories to the US.
2) The discovery of gold in California in 1848 and migration of settlers over the Oregon Trail led to the rapid growth and statehood of western regions like California.
3) The Mexican Cession of 1848 following the Mexican-American War and the Gadsden Purchase of 1853 extended US control from the Rio
Slavery expanded greatly in the 19th century American South as the cotton industry boomed. Over 1 million slaves were forcibly relocated from the upper South to the deep South states between 1820 and 1860. Though conditions for slaves varied, they were all denied freedom. Slaves resisted through slow work, sabotage, and occasional revolts like Nat Turner's rebellion in 1831. The Missouri Compromise of 1820 attempted to balance the number of slave and free states admitted to the union.
1. The document provides an overview of the Market Revolution period in US history from 1815-1860, which saw improvements in transportation, commercialization, and industrialization.
2. Key developments discussed include the invention of the cotton gin, which led to the rapid growth of cotton and slave labor in the South; the establishment of textile mills in New England powered by water power and staffed initially by young farm women known as "mill girls"; and advances in transportation including canals like the Erie Canal and the emergence of railroads.
3. These changes helped integrate the growing US economy, strengthened the North, and oriented the country more towards its own interior rather than Europe, fueling national identity and pride
The document provides an overview of key events and developments in US history from the War of 1812 through the Monroe administration. Some of the main topics covered include the causes and results of the War of 1812; Andrew Jackson's military career and Indian removal policies; the development of political parties and the "Virginia dynasty"; and the establishment of the Monroe Doctrine. The survey touches on westward expansion, slavery, and the growth of industry during this period.
This document provides an overview of several major events and developments in early US and world history from the late 18th to early 19th centuries, including:
1) The French Revolution, Haitian Revolution, and Napoleonic Wars in Europe, which distracted European powers and allowed for independence movements in Latin America.
2) The Louisiana Purchase in 1803, which more than doubled the size of the US by acquiring French territory west of the Mississippi River.
3) The Lewis and Clark Expedition from 1804-1806, which explored the new Louisiana Territory and declared US sovereignty over Native tribes.
This document provides an overview and summary of the first class of a US History survey course covering the period from 1800 to 1877. It includes announcements about volunteering opportunities, discussion of learning strategies for the final exam focusing on critical analysis and context over simple facts, and an overview of key themes to be covered over the semester including territorial expansion, wars, industrialization, and the abolition of slavery.
The document summarizes key events surrounding the creation of the US Constitution. It describes the political instability under the Articles of Confederation due to issues like war debts. It then discusses the 1787 Constitutional Convention where delegates debated and ultimately agreed to compromises to appease small and large states as well as northern and southern states, including the bicameral legislature and 3/5 compromise. The Constitution was then ratified after significant debate, and a Bill of Rights was later added.
The document provides an overview of events and developments in the United States following the Revolutionary War. It discusses the Articles of Confederation, the first written constitution which gave most powers to states and created a weak national government. It also summarizes key agreements like the Treaty of Paris in 1783, as well as territorial expansions and the impacts on groups like African Americans, including the proliferation of slavery in the South. The inadequacies of the Articles of Confederation system led to calls for a new Constitution to strengthen the national government.
The document provides an overview of key events and figures during the American Revolutionary War. It discusses the formation of the Continental Army in 1775, the rejection of the Olive Branch Petition by King George III, and the impact of Thomas Paine's "Common Sense" pamphlet in 1776. It also summarizes the signing of the Declaration of Independence that same year and profiles some of the major leaders and groups involved in the Revolutionary War, including Washington, Franklin, soldiers, Indians, enslaved people, and women.
The document summarizes key events in the British colonies in North America from the 1760s to 1770s that led to increasing conflicts with Britain and the beginnings of the American Revolution. It discusses the economic hardships faced by many colonists, the British victory over the French in the French and Indian War, and the various Acts passed by the British Parliament to tax the colonies that angered colonists and challenged the idea of their rights as Englishmen. This led to acts of protest and non-cooperation by the colonists along with events like the Boston Massacre and Boston Tea Party, culminating in the battles of Lexington and Concord which marked the unofficial start of the Revolutionary War.
This document provides an overview of the British colonies in North America in 1750. It discusses the population, economic activities, cities, forms of government, and religious makeup of the colonies. Key points include:
- The colonies were dominated by British settlers and ruled by England and its monarchs.
- The main economic activities were agriculture and seafaring/fishing. Major cities included Boston, New York, and Philadelphia as ports.
- Colonies had appointed governors from Britain and elected colonial assemblies.
- The population was about 1.17 million, mostly English but also German, Scots-Irish, Dutch, and Jews. Enslaved Africans made up 20% of the population.
- Religion
This document discusses the politics of empire and colonization between 1550-1750. Specifically, it outlines the competition between European powers like England, Spain, France, and the Netherlands for control of colonies and trade in the New World. This led to a series of wars throughout the 16th-17th-18th centuries as these countries sought to monopolize land, resources, peoples and trade in the Americas and globally. It also discusses the English conquest and colonization of Ireland and how that model was applied in British colonies in North America and the Caribbean.
Romanticism emerged in Europe between 1775-1830 in response to industrialization and rise of democratic ideals. It valued emotion, nature, medievalism, individualism and nationalism. Major European Romantic artists and philosophers included Goethe, Wordsworth, and Kant. American Romanticism was influenced by these ideals and emerged through Transcendentalism and the Hudson River School of landscape painting. Famous American Romantic artists included Copley, Leutze, Hicks, Stuart, and Bierstadt who depicted American landscapes, history, and ideals of individualism.
This document provides an introduction to rhetorical analysis. It defines rhetoric as the art of persuasion and rhetorical analysis as breaking down persuasive texts to understand how their parts fit together. The document discusses the rhetorical situation, appeals (logos, ethos, pathos), tone, organization/structure, and surface features. It also provides a brief history of rhetoric from ancient Israel and Greece to its development by the Sophists, Plato, Aristotle, and Romans. Finally, it outlines Aristotle's five canons of rhetoric: invention, arrangement, style, memory, and delivery.
Rhetoric refers to persuasive language used to influence audiences. Effective rhetoric uses three appeals: ethos establishes the writer's credibility; pathos appeals to emotions; and logos uses facts and logic. Together these appeals can combine to craft persuasive messages tailored to specific audiences.
Lois is hosting a give-away party on Sunday, June 24 from 5-7 pm at her apartment located at Ege Universitesi lojmanlari, Blok C, #11. Guests should take the Evka 3 Metro station and walk downhill towards Ege U, turning left past Konuk Evi ve Lojmanlari to find the first building on the right with stairs and a ramp in back. Lois can be contacted via email or phone to RSVP for the party so she knows how many refreshments to prepare.
This document provides an overview of Reconstruction in the US following the Civil War. It discusses the presidency of Ulysses S. Grant, the 15th Amendment granting Black men the right to vote, and the split over women's suffrage. It also summarizes the experiences of freed slaves, the rise and fall of Republican state governments in the South during Reconstruction, and the eventual "redemption" of Southern states by Democrats which reversed Reconstruction policies.
This document provides an overview of key events and developments during the US Civil War and Reconstruction era from 1861 to 1870. It discusses major battles of the Civil War, the Emancipation Proclamation, treatment of fugitive slaves who fled to Union lines, Sherman's March to the Sea in 1864, and the surrender at Appomattox in 1865. It also summarizes President Lincoln's and Congress's differing plans for Reconstruction, the passage of the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments, and the establishment of the Freedmen's Bureau to aid freed slaves.
This document provides a summary of key events and developments in the United States leading up to and during the American Civil War from the 1850s to the 1860s. It outlines the political crises over slavery and states' rights that increased sectional tensions between the North and South. It discusses pivotal court cases like Dred Scott v. Sandford and events like the raid on Harper's Ferry that further divided the nation. The document also summarizes the secession of Southern states, the outbreak of the Civil War after the attack on Fort Sumter, and how the war expanded the powers of the federal government and ultimately led to the Emancipation Proclamation freeing millions of enslaved people.
This US history survey document discusses social change and reform between the 1830s-1850s. It summarizes key immigration trends of Irish and Germans fleeing famine and revolution. It also discusses the abolition, women's rights, and temperance reform movements. The document provides details on leaders like the Grimke sisters and William Lloyd Garrison and conventions like the first women's rights convention in Seneca Falls in 1848. It announces an upcoming midterm exam and offers options for studying or meeting with the professor.
This document summarizes key events of US expansion and the Mexican-American War between 1830-1853:
1) It describes the forced removal of Native American tribes like the Cherokee to lands west of the Mississippi River, known as the "Trail of Tears", as well as the annexation of Texas and war with Mexico that added new western territories to the US.
2) The discovery of gold in California in 1848 and migration of settlers over the Oregon Trail led to the rapid growth and statehood of western regions like California.
3) The Mexican Cession of 1848 following the Mexican-American War and the Gadsden Purchase of 1853 extended US control from the Rio
Slavery expanded greatly in the 19th century American South as the cotton industry boomed. Over 1 million slaves were forcibly relocated from the upper South to the deep South states between 1820 and 1860. Though conditions for slaves varied, they were all denied freedom. Slaves resisted through slow work, sabotage, and occasional revolts like Nat Turner's rebellion in 1831. The Missouri Compromise of 1820 attempted to balance the number of slave and free states admitted to the union.
1. The document provides an overview of the Market Revolution period in US history from 1815-1860, which saw improvements in transportation, commercialization, and industrialization.
2. Key developments discussed include the invention of the cotton gin, which led to the rapid growth of cotton and slave labor in the South; the establishment of textile mills in New England powered by water power and staffed initially by young farm women known as "mill girls"; and advances in transportation including canals like the Erie Canal and the emergence of railroads.
3. These changes helped integrate the growing US economy, strengthened the North, and oriented the country more towards its own interior rather than Europe, fueling national identity and pride
The document provides an overview of key events and developments in US history from the War of 1812 through the Monroe administration. Some of the main topics covered include the causes and results of the War of 1812; Andrew Jackson's military career and Indian removal policies; the development of political parties and the "Virginia dynasty"; and the establishment of the Monroe Doctrine. The survey touches on westward expansion, slavery, and the growth of industry during this period.
This document provides an overview of several major events and developments in early US and world history from the late 18th to early 19th centuries, including:
1) The French Revolution, Haitian Revolution, and Napoleonic Wars in Europe, which distracted European powers and allowed for independence movements in Latin America.
2) The Louisiana Purchase in 1803, which more than doubled the size of the US by acquiring French territory west of the Mississippi River.
3) The Lewis and Clark Expedition from 1804-1806, which explored the new Louisiana Territory and declared US sovereignty over Native tribes.
This document provides an overview and summary of the first class of a US History survey course covering the period from 1800 to 1877. It includes announcements about volunteering opportunities, discussion of learning strategies for the final exam focusing on critical analysis and context over simple facts, and an overview of key themes to be covered over the semester including territorial expansion, wars, industrialization, and the abolition of slavery.
The document summarizes key events surrounding the creation of the US Constitution. It describes the political instability under the Articles of Confederation due to issues like war debts. It then discusses the 1787 Constitutional Convention where delegates debated and ultimately agreed to compromises to appease small and large states as well as northern and southern states, including the bicameral legislature and 3/5 compromise. The Constitution was then ratified after significant debate, and a Bill of Rights was later added.
The document provides an overview of events and developments in the United States following the Revolutionary War. It discusses the Articles of Confederation, the first written constitution which gave most powers to states and created a weak national government. It also summarizes key agreements like the Treaty of Paris in 1783, as well as territorial expansions and the impacts on groups like African Americans, including the proliferation of slavery in the South. The inadequacies of the Articles of Confederation system led to calls for a new Constitution to strengthen the national government.
The document provides an overview of key events and figures during the American Revolutionary War. It discusses the formation of the Continental Army in 1775, the rejection of the Olive Branch Petition by King George III, and the impact of Thomas Paine's "Common Sense" pamphlet in 1776. It also summarizes the signing of the Declaration of Independence that same year and profiles some of the major leaders and groups involved in the Revolutionary War, including Washington, Franklin, soldiers, Indians, enslaved people, and women.
The document summarizes key events in the British colonies in North America from the 1760s to 1770s that led to increasing conflicts with Britain and the beginnings of the American Revolution. It discusses the economic hardships faced by many colonists, the British victory over the French in the French and Indian War, and the various Acts passed by the British Parliament to tax the colonies that angered colonists and challenged the idea of their rights as Englishmen. This led to acts of protest and non-cooperation by the colonists along with events like the Boston Massacre and Boston Tea Party, culminating in the battles of Lexington and Concord which marked the unofficial start of the Revolutionary War.
This document provides an overview of the British colonies in North America in 1750. It discusses the population, economic activities, cities, forms of government, and religious makeup of the colonies. Key points include:
- The colonies were dominated by British settlers and ruled by England and its monarchs.
- The main economic activities were agriculture and seafaring/fishing. Major cities included Boston, New York, and Philadelphia as ports.
- Colonies had appointed governors from Britain and elected colonial assemblies.
- The population was about 1.17 million, mostly English but also German, Scots-Irish, Dutch, and Jews. Enslaved Africans made up 20% of the population.
- Religion
This document discusses the politics of empire and colonization between 1550-1750. Specifically, it outlines the competition between European powers like England, Spain, France, and the Netherlands for control of colonies and trade in the New World. This led to a series of wars throughout the 16th-17th-18th centuries as these countries sought to monopolize land, resources, peoples and trade in the Americas and globally. It also discusses the English conquest and colonization of Ireland and how that model was applied in British colonies in North America and the Caribbean.
http://fathertheo.files.wordpress.com/2011/02/fugitiveslaveact.gifhttp://0.tqn.com/d/womenshistory/1/0/U/v/2/1840-Anti-Slavery-Meeting-96739332ww1.jpg – Fugitive Slave Law Convention of 1850 w F. Douglass, men & women, Black & white. http://www.ohiohistorycentral.org/images/779.jpg