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101 Things To Do With A Mobile Phone In Healthcare
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Description: |
- 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. |
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Contents: |
1 Introduction – The Tipping Point 1 2 Engaging The Mobile Telecoms Industry 2 3 Large IT Vendors and Wireless eHealth 3 4 New Outlets For eHealth 4 5 Outsourcing Mobilised eHealth 5 6 PACS - Getting The Picture At Last 6 7 Wearable Wireless eHealth 7 8 Wireless Tagging 8 9 SMS - Keeping The Appointment 9 10 101 Applications 11 10.1 Appointment Reminders (SMS) 12 10.2 Patient Support (SMS) 12 10.3 Medication Reminders (SMS) 12 10.4 Appointment Booking 13 10.5 Medical Data On SIM Card 13 10.6 Patient Information For Relatives 13 10.7 Peer Support For Patients 14 10.8 Post Cardiac Surgery Support 14 10.9 Accessing Patient Records 14 10.10 Access To Dietary Information 15 10.11 ePrescribing 15 10.12 Patient Paging In Outpatient Clinics 15 10.13 Support For Alzheimer Patients 16 10.14 Support For Diabetes Sufferers 16 10.15 Clinical Trials 16 10.16 Support For Dementia Sufferers 17 10.17 Support During Rehabilitation 17 10.18 Support For The Deaf 17 10.19 Support For The Chronically Ill 18 10.20 Support For Addicts 18 10.21 Support For STD Sufferers 18 10.22 Baby Monitoring 19 10.23 Suicide Watch 19 10.24 Support For Children 19 10.25 Food Product Dietary Information 20 10.26 Allergy Alert Services For Asthmatics 20 10.27 Doctor At Home 20 10.28 Self Diagnosis 21 10.29 Patient Data For Overseas Travellers 21 10.30 Data Capture From Medical Instrumentation 21 10.31 Smart Card Applications 22 10.32 Monitoring For Asthma Sufferers 22 10.33 Blood Glucose Monitoring 22 10.34 Temperature Measurement 23 10.35 Weight Measurement 23 10.36 Medication Compliance Monitoring 23 10.37 Voice Pattern Analysis 24 10.38 Analysis Of Breath 24 10.39 Heart Rate Monitoring 24 10.40 Smart Homes For The Elderly 25 10.41 Patient Diaries For Clinical Trials 25 10.42 Collecting Data From Pacemakers 25 10.43 Fitness Monitoring 26 10.44 Real Time Patient Assessment 26 10.45 Sleep Monitoring 26 10.46 Collection of Data From Wearable Sensors 27 10.47 Collection of Data From Implanted Devices 27 10.48 Diabetes Monitoring In Chiropody 27 10.49 Detection Of Septic Episodes 28 10.50 Remote Antenatal Care 28 10.51 Telehealth Gateways 28 10.52 Patient Location 29 10.53 Pulse Oximetry 29 10.54 Personalised Diagnosis 29 10.55 Early Detection Of Cardiological Syndromes 30 10.56 Appointment Scheduling 30 10.57 Access to Patient Data For Domiciliary Workers 30 10.58 Diagnosis Support For Domiciliary Workers 31 10.59 Personal Attack Alarm Services 31 10.60 Clinician Identification 31 10.61 Asset Tracking (RFID) 32 10.62 Stock Control (RFID) 32 10.63 Patient Identification (RFID) 32 10.66 Dispensing Support 33 10.65 Locating Staff 33 10.66 Conferencing During Emergencies 33 10.67 Accessing Training Material 34 10.68 Accessing Laboratory Results 34 10.69 Blood Bank Support Services 34 10.70 Locating Blood Donors 35 10.71 Locating Organ Donors 35 10.72 Support For A&E 35 10.73 Tracking Surgical Instruments 36 10.74 Controlling Insulin Patches 36 10.75 Billing 36 10.76 Patient Consent 37 10.77 Drug Authenticity Verification (RFID) 37 10.78 Patient Entertainment And Communication 37 10.79 Patient Notes Dictation Systems 38 10.80 Administration At The Point Of Care 38 10.81 Linking Emergency Services To A&E 38 10.82 Access To X-ray Images 39 10.83 Skin Cancer Monitoring 39 10.84 Remote Consultation (Telemedicine) 39 10.85 Data Collection From Capsule Endoscopes 40 10.86 Conventional Endoscopes (Picture Phones) 40 10.87 Nutrition Coaching 40 10.88 Monitoring Wound Healing 41 10.89 Support For Neurosurgeons 41 10.90 Breast Cancer Screening 41 10.91 Context Sensitive Medicine 42 10.92 Disease Monitoring 42 10.93 Food Contamination Alerts 42 10.94 Environmental Contamination Alerts 43 10.95 MRSA Detector 43 10.96 Telecare In Rural Areas 43 10.97 Telecare In Developing Countries 44 10.98 A&E Field Support 44 10.99 Wireless Stethoscope 44 10.100 Support For AIDS Sufferers 45 10.101 Call Centre Supported Health Services 45 |
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