33. By assisting in the collection, management, and interpretation of outcomes
data, the registry can help your program enhance patient care, improve
quality of life, and increase support from healthcare partners.
• Access program and patient data reports instantly, and benchmark your
results against national averages.
• Implement quality improvement projects based on real data, and
enhance documentation for administrators and referring physicians.
• Influence healthcare policy makers to utilize cardiac rehabilitation, and
improve coverage and reimbursement rates for your program.
36. Longevity Revolution
By 2030, the proportion of
the U.S. population aged 65
and older will double to
about 71 million older
adults, or 1 in 5 Americans.
Wisconsin Plan for Older People:
http://cdm16119.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/p267601coll4/id/2461/rec/11
37. Wisconsin’s
“Elder Boom”
Projections for the
Growing 65+ Population,
2005 to 2035WISCONSIN DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH SERVICES
Division of Long Term Care
P-00138 (10/2009)
38.
39.
40.
41.
42.
43.
44.
45.
46. My Own Home:
The #1 Choice for Long-Term Care
https://mlaem.fs.ml.com/content/dam/ML/Articles/pdf/AR6SX48F.pdf
49. Dr. Eric Topol
Take-aways
• Plenty of diseases that
need to be monitored
• Benefit of monitoring
reduces costly
hospitalization by
catching issues before
they are serious
• Wireless technologies
discussed in 2009 are
now mainstream; but
they are all individual
https://www.ted.com/talks/eric_topol_the_wireless_future_of_medicine/transcript?language=en
50. The Air Conditioner Story
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-05-17/oregon-s-radical-health-overhaul-blazes-new-trail.html
51. Intel / Eric Dishman Ted Talk
Take health care off the
mainframe
https://www.ted.com/talks/eric_dishman_take_health_care_off_the_mainframe#t-332933
52.
53.
54.
55. Health Sense
1. Passive check-in
2. Out of bed
3. In bed too long
4. Front door open
5. Bathroom activity
6. Socialization
7. Bed occupancy
8. Bathroom usage
9. Activity levels http://healthsense.com/solutions/health-and-safety-monitoring/
56. DIY - Staying at Home
Longer
• 77-year-old in the
middle stages of
Alzheimer's. Lives on her
own, monitored
remotely by family.
• “It's kept her to the
point where we haven't
even had to have in-
home care yet. Our goal
is to keep her in her
home for as long as
possible,” said her
daughter Cathy Johnson
http://www.cnn.com/2014/08/25/tech/innovation/alzheimers-smart-home/index.html?iref=allsearch
57. SmartThings
No Monthly Fee
SmartThings looks for specific triggers,
and sends alerts (by text) to her two
daughters:
• Silent sensor on her front door
detects if she leaves between 9 pm
and 6 am.
• Key chain sensors detect when she
goes outside her condo's grounds.
• A motion sensor in the kitchen helps
monitor her eating habits
• Another in the bedroom notes when
she wakes up in the morning and
catches any sleeping issues.
• There is even a flood sensor in the
laundry room.
http://smarthings.com
58. Kemuri
Help your loved ones keep their independence
Installation
• KemuriSense® smart power sockets are
professionally installed in the kitchen.
There’s no change in lifestyle, nothing to
remember and no intrusive monitoring. It
works like a standard double power socket.
• Smart software checks activity every hour,
identifies changes and keeps everybody
informed via the Internet. Nothing could be
simpler.
• The product is most suitable for people
who do not wish to be reminded of their
increasing frailty by wearing an alarm
pendant. They have to appoint a trusted
person, or organisation, who can share the
data with family members, friends or
carers. No data will be shared without full
consent.
http://www.kemuri.org.uk/
59. Smart Wireless Pill
Bottles
• Determines when
bottle is opened
• Counts how many
pills are removed
• Transmits data
wirelessly over
3G connection
• No setup!
http://adheretech.com/
http://medcitynews.com/2014/12/10-approaches-companies-taking-create-better-pill-takers/
$300 billion market opportunity of medication adherence
60. https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02222103
http://rhythmdiagnosticsystems.com/
MultiSenseTM sensor is a self-contained, reusable, rechargeable, battery-powered, flexible
strip, measuring 4 X 1.2 inches that simultaneously tracks and records a number of
physiological health related parameters such as ECG, heart rate, pulse synchronized oxygen
saturation, temperature, respiratory rate, depth of respiration and motion/position. One
advantage of this device over current home diagnostic systems is the capability for recording
over several nights
61. Quietyme
Using its intelligent sensor and analytics
platform, Quietyme provides streaming
solutions that prevent costly damage and
disturbances in hospitals, hotels,
apartments and homes.
• ZigBee sensors monitor noise, temp,
humidity
• Analytics s/w learns, recommends
change, and then monitors (cheaper)
• Hospitality Solutions: Stop relying on
complaints to identify problems.
http://quietyme.com/
63. Pixie Briefs
Any physician will tell you
that human waste can tell
you a lot about physical
health. A used diaper, for
example, contains valuable
data about the health of the
baby. So what if a baby’s
diaper could alert parents to
potential health risks?
Parents can then scan the QR
code on the diaper to receive
information about their
child's health on an app.
http://www.ericsson.com/thinkingahead/networked_society/stories/#/film/pixie-smart-diapers
64. Pixie Briefs – It gets better!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OifRYoH6OUA
How many people have seen Will Stephen’s TED talk about nothing?
Nothing to sell
Nothing to give away
42nd result when googling “Picture”
11: number of years I worked for GE
2000: year I started
Liquid helium
11: number of years I worked for GE
2000: year I started
“Here’s the air conditioner story: There’s a 90-year-old woman with well-managed congestive heart failure who lives in an apartment without air conditioning.
A hot day could send the temperature in her apartment high enough that it strains her cardiovascular system and kicks her into full-blown congestive heart failure. Under the current system, Medicare will pay for the ambulance and $50,000 to stabilize her. It will not pay for a $200 window air conditioner, which is all she needs to stay in her home and out of the hospital. The difference to the health-care system is $49,800. And we could save that $49,800 without reducing her benefits or her quality of life.”
Used mainly for pharmaceutical and research engagements.
i.e. high priced HIV and cancer treatment drugs.
It’s a GE StartUp Health program graduate.
A real time transmitting version of this Strip is under development.
http://bio2devicegroup.org/content/development-wearable-cardiopulmonary-sensor-system-2014-02-19