Top Rated Hyderabad Call Girls Erragadda ⟟ 9332606886 ⟟ Call Me For Genuine ...
Mobile Device Connectivity
1. Part 3: Mobile Device Connectivity Benefits
JOHN R. ZALESKI, PHD, CPHIMS
Case Study 2 VICE PRESIDENT OF CLINICAL APPLICATIONS & CTO
Supporting Technologies JZALESKI@NUVON.COM
C: +1 484 319 7345
Summary
O: +1 215 966 6142
2. MOBILE HEALTHCARE NEED
(PWC HRI STUDY, 2010 HEALTHCARE UNWIRED)
– SURVEY OF 1000 PHYSICIANS, 2000 CONSUMERS
– MORE THAN 30% OF PHYSICIANS: MAKE DECISIONS ON
INCOMPLETE INFORMATION
– 40% OF PHYSICIANS: COULD ELIMINATE FROM 11%30%
OF OFFICE VISITS THROUGH USE OF MOBILE HEALTH
TECHNOLOGIES
– PATIENT COMPLIANCE: 88% OF PHYSICIANS WOULD LIKE
PATIENTS TO BE ABLE TO MONITOR THEIR HEALTH (WEIGHT,
BLOOD SUGAR)
2
Sunday, May 29, 2011
3. MOBILE HEALTHCARE TECHNOLOGY IMPEDIMENTS
(PWC HRI STUDY, 2010 HEALTHCARE UNWIRED)
– INTEGRATION: >60% OF PHYSICIANS IN SURVEY USE
PERSONAL DEVICES FOR MOBILE HEALTH SOLUTIONS THAT
ARE NOT CONNECTED TO THEIR PRACTICE OR HOSPITAL
SYSTEMS (E.G.: EMAIL)
– SECURITY: >30% OF PCPS AND >40% OF SPECIALISTS
SURVEYED CONCERNED ABOUT PRIVACY & SECURITY
– BANDWIDTH: CONCERN OVER EXISTING HEALTH ENTERPRISE
NETWORKS TO SUPPORT ADDED BANDWIDTH
3
Sunday, May 29, 2011
4. ARE THE BENEFITS REAL?
• CLEVELAND CLINIC & MICROSOFT:
– DECEMBER 2008 PILOT PROJECT, 250 PARTICIPANTS (26% DIABETES, 6% HF, 68% HYPERTENSION)
• ADVAMED (M.E. STACHURA, MD & E.V. KHASANSHINA, MD, PHD):
- OCTOBER 2007, SURVEY INCLUSIVE OF 426 PATIENTS WITH DM, CHF, COPD
• CCF, ADVAMED, PWC HRI REPORTS:
Condition Activity Effect
Diabetes monitoring (PA, Post-discharge 71% increase in days
OH) monitoring using WiFi between visits; 42% drop
transmitter of vital signs in overall cost/patient
CHF (Trans-European) Home Care Management 35% drop in LoS; 10%
of patients with reduction in office visits;
implanted cardiac 65% drop in home health
defibrillators visits
COPD (CANADA) Remote monitoring of Reduced hospital
respiratory illness admissions by 50%
“Cleveland Clinic/Microsoft Pilot Promising; Home Health Services May Benefit Chronic Disease Management” 3/1/2010
4
Sunday, May 29, 2011
5. WIDESPREAD REMOTE MONITORING CAN CUT
CHRONIC CARE COSTS BY ~$200B1
“Savings largely attributable
Condition Estimated 25-Yr Cost to better management…
Saving because widespread
Congestive Heart Failure $102.5B implementation … means key
vital signs can be transmitted
(CHF)
to a caregiver or data center
Diabetes $54.4B in real-time and trigger
instant alerts when readings
Chronic Obstructive $24.1B
change in a medically
Pulmonary Disease (COPD) different way.”
Chronic Skin Ulcers $16B --Robert Litan, Page 2.
Patients with chronic illness account for ~80% of
increases in Medicare costs
-Lisa Remington, 2008 MegaTrends Predictions and Forecasts Across the Healthcare Delivery System (Jan/Feb 2008)
1Tim Rowan reporting on AT&T Study, and conducted by Brookings Institution
economist Robert Litan. Study presented by Better Health Care Together
Coalition.
5
Sunday, May 29, 2011
6. ATTRACTIVENESS, USEFULNESS OF WIFI
TECHNOLOGIES TO CLINICIANS
EMR Access 83% PCPs 88% Specialists
Prescribing Meds 86% PCPs 82% Specialists
InPatient Monitoring 69% PCPs 75% Specialists
Referral Initiation/Track 65% PCPs 62% Specialists
Patient Communication 61% PCPs 59% Specialists
Remote Monitoring 65% PCPs 54% Specialists
56% Indicated mobile health access would expedite
decision making
Source: PwC HRI Physician Survey, 2010 6
Sunday, May 29, 2011
7. Standards Based WiFi Technology Spectrum
(From Home Healthcare Horizons)
Source: JT Adams, L. Schmitt, J. Zaleski. “Simple,
Interoperable, Wireless Connectivity Solutions for Home
Healthcare.” Home Healthcare Horizons, 2010. Page 41
7
Sunday, May 29, 2011
8. Standards Based WiFi Technology Spectrum
(Example: Zigbee Mesh Networking)
Source:
ZigBee Wireless Sensor Applications for Health, Wellness and Fitness . March
2009, Page 9. http://www.zigbee.org
8
Sunday, May 29, 2011
10. MORE CONTINUOUSLY AVAILABLE INFORMATION
UNDERGIRDS BETTER CARE
• EVOLUTION FROM EPISODIC TO CONTINUOUS MONITORING
– PROMOTES MORE HOLISTIC VIEW
– TRENDS BECOME VISIBLE OVER LONG TERM
– EXPOSURE OF INDIVIDUALLY UNINTERESTING EVENTS, ONCE INTEGRATED,
PROMOTE EARLIER DETECTION OF UNDERLYING PROBLEMS
• PATIENT CARE DEVICE DATA ARE KEY TO CONTINUOUS TRENDING
– FROM ICU FLOW SHEETS TO PHR, EVIDENCE EXISTS TO DEMONSTRATE
BENEFITS
– A KEY ENABLER TO THE OVERALL PROCESS OF CLINICAL DECISION MAKING
10
Sunday, May 29, 2011
11. TO SUPPORT CLINICAL DECISION MAKING, PATIENT
CARE DEVICE INTEGRATION SHOULD…
• BE SEAMLESS: OPERATE ACROSS ENTERPRISE ENVIRONMENT, THROUGH
ANY NETWORK TOPOLOGY, AND PROVIDE SECURE REMOTE ACCESS TO DATA
FROM COLLECTION TO DELIVERY
• BE SCALABLE: TRUE PLUG-AND-PLAY WITHOUT NEED FOR TOPOLOGY
CHANGES, AND WITH AUTO-DISCOVERY OF NEW DEVICES UPON
ATTACHMENT
• BE RELIABLE: S/W AND H/W SHOULD SUPPORT AUTOMATIC FAILOVER AND
BE SELF-HEALING
• BE FLEXIBLE: BECOME A STANDARD TOOL OF CLINICIAN AND PATIENT BY
INTEGRATING WITH WORKFLOW TO ENHANCE STANDARDS OF CARE, NOT
JUST SUPPORT THEM
11
Sunday, May 29, 2011
12. Summary
• Medical device connectivity is essential adjunct
for real-time intervention and clinical guidance
• Clinical decision support systems will need to
leverage medical device technology and focus on
real-time access to data is essential, including
waveform data
• Future electronic medical record development
should take real-time considerations into account
in terms of interventional guidance.
12
Sunday, May 29, 2011
13. “As to diseases, make a habit of
two things—to health, or at least
to do no harm.”
Hippocrates in Epidemics, Bk I, Sect. XI
13
Sunday, May 29, 2011
16. Book I
John Zaleski, Ph.D.
Integrating Device Data into the Electronic Medical Record
A Developer’s Guide to Design and a Practitioner’s Guide to
Application
ISBN 978-3-89578-323-4
A19100-L531- B977-X-7600
Approx. 300 pages
Approx. 100 illustrations
Contents:
THE MEDICAL DEVICE INTEGRATION LANDSCAPE
DEVICE NETWORKING AND COMMUNICATION
MECHANISMS FOR INTERFACING AND INTEGRATING
DEVICE DATA
REAL-TIME AND NON-REAL-TIME DATA MANAGEMENT
COMPUTER-BASED PATIENT RECORD
CORRECTLY ASSOCIATING DEVICE DATA WITH
PATIENTS
BALANCING DATA QUANTITY WITH QUALITY:
TECHNIQUES FOR DATA ANALYSIS AND REDUCTION
HOW TO DISPLAY DATA IN A FLOWSHEET
INTERFACE SOFTWARE AS A MEDICAL DEVICE
THE FUTURE OF MEDICAL DEVICE INTEGRATION,
INCLUDING DEVICE COMMAND & CONTROL
EXAMPLE METHODS AND SOFTWARE
16
Sunday, May 29, 2011
17. Thank you for your attention!
JOHN R. ZALESKI, PHD, CPHIMS
VICE PRESIDENT OF CLINICAL APPLICATIONS & CTO
JZALESKI@NUVON.COM
C: +1 484 319 7345
O: +1 215 966 6142
17
Sunday, May 29, 2011