Research and Markets, the largest resource for market research information in world providing essential market research reports, industry research, industry analysis, forecasts, market studies, company profiles and country reports.
Welcome - Home - Register - Login - Help/FAQ - 0 items View Basket
Worlds Largest Market Research Resource - 381579 Live Reports
Search Research and Markets
  Search
Enter keywords, a title or
a report id number below.





Advanced   
Company search
Register for free email updates of market research
Currency
  Select a currency for use throughout the site



Viewing report

Order by Fax
Printer Friendly
PDF Brochure
Send to Friend
Enquire before Buying
ElectronicAdd to Basket



101 Things To Do With A Mobile Phone In Healthcare
Wireless Healthcare, June 2005


  Description  
  Table of Contents  
    
    
    
   
 Enquire before Buying  
 Send to a Friend  

- An overview of the market for wireless and mobile ehealth.
- Market accelerators and inhibitors.
- The role of clinicians as innovators.
- Self diagnosis - a threat or an opportunity.
- 101 applications for mobile and wireless devices in healthcare.

When sites offering medical advice first appeared on the World Wide Web few GPs believed that, within a decade, they would encounter patients who used the Internet to become specialists in a particular ailment. Before the arrival of the 'informed patient' the GP was expected to provide a diagnosis, then recommend a course of treatment. Today many patients believe they already have a diagnosis and merely wish to have it confirmed by a series of tests. The question is no longer 'Doctor what is wrong with me?' but 'Doctor when can my treatment begin?' Mobile and wireless ehealth will enhance and broaden the scope of this type of self diagnosis.

The market for ehealth technology could be approaching a tipping point. In this report we look at a number of ehealth companies that have been formed by surgeons. We feel that companies such as Intelligent Medical Systems and Xenetec, that are run by clinicians with first hand experience of clinical processes, will accelerate the take up of wireless ehealth by giving credibility to ehealth as a technology and providing reference sites within the healthcare sector itself.

Peer pressure will drive the ehealth market, especially if consultants start reaping the benefits of venture capital backing and IPOs. The report states that, in the not too distant future, the ehealth market will enter a new phase where clinicians themselves encourage the automation of clinical processes.

This is happening as a new generation of ehealth products and services, based on wireless and mobile technology, is putting diagnosis and treatment management into the hands of the patient. Companies such as Card Guard and Vitaphone are offering suites of wireless ehealth applications – which include blood pressure, heart rate and blood glucose monitoring - to patients, with or without the support of a conventional healthcare provider.

This report describes 101 examples of the use of wireless and mobile technology in healthcare. While some of the applications are speculative, for example a mobile device to detect MRSA, others, such as SMS based patient reminders, have already been deployed and are earning revenue for vendors.

Who should purchase this report:-

Healthcare IT vendors.
Wireless equipment vendors.
Healthcare providers.
Decision makers in the public healthcare sector.
Investors in the healthcare IT sector.
Mobile operators.
Other organisations active in ehealth provision.



Customers who bought this item also bought

Wireless eHealth Platforms

eHealth Solutions for Pharma: Strategies for Salesforces, Marketing, Patient Compliance and Clinical Trials

Patient Monitoring Markets

Defining the "Black Bag" for the 21st Century: The Evolution of Mobile eHealth Applications

Wireless Monitoring in Home Healthcare

Wireless Healthcare 2008

eHealth And Consumer Electronics

Patient Monitoring in Intensive Care Unit and Critical Care Unit

Emerging eHealth Technologies: Key Trends Impacting the Physician-Patient Relationship

Understanding The New eHealth Model

Wireless Based Remote Monitoring and Diagnostics

RFID as an eHealth Platform



Top of page


   All rights reserved. � Copyright 2009 Research and Markets
   Terms and conditions Privacy Policy Publishers Employment Opportunities Site Map Link to us Webmaster


Research and Markets RSS Feeds