Identity Management is a Challenge Health Plans Must Meet

Is your organization ready?

http://www.MCOL. com

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Conclusion

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On Microsoft Health Accelerator, Merck Accelerator and Samsung NEXT

Microsoft Accelerator, Merck Accelerator and Samsung NEXT
have the highest awareness of all corporate health accelerators

By Markus Pohl

Among corporate health accelerators Microsoft Accelerator has the highest awareness level. Merck Accelerator and Samsung NEXT are ranking second and third. 42.8% of the digital health community has heard of Microsoft Accelerator. 26.7% have heard of Merck Accelerator, 26.4% of SAMSUNG Next and 24.8% of Grants4Apps by Bayer. Techstars (Barclays Accelerator, London) (18.2%) follows fifth with some distance behind.

These findings are part of our mHealth Economics program, the biggest survey of its kind with 2,400 answers from the digital global health community. In the ranking of of corporate accelerators’ awareness 21 corporate accelerators investing in healthcare have been included.

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Here is the full ranking:

Microsoft Accelerator, Merck Accelerator and Samsung NEXT have the highest awareness of all corporate health accelerators

Conclusion

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Healthcare Executive Attitudes Toward Artificial Intelligence

Opportunities and Obstacles

By http://www.MCOL.com

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Conclusion

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Did ADA Leaders Mislead Congress about EDR Security?

 Electronic Dental Records [EDR] Security?

By Darrell K. Pruitt DDS

“Terrifying Truth: Ransomware is Everywhere – At its basest level, ransomware is a form of kidnapping. Hackers effectively ‘kidnap’ a business’s data and information systems and threaten to destroy it unless the business pays a ransom for its safe return.”

Todd Lewis for Nibletz [October 24, 2017]
http://www.nibletz.com/security/ransomware

Lewis: “Healthcare and hospital networks are prime targets for these attacks. A patient whose medical service provider is unable to access critical patient information can be in a life-or-death situation unless the healthcare network is rapidly recovered and brought back on line. Cyberattackers take advantage of this urgency and realize that hospitals have greater incentives to pay a ransom to recover their systems and operations. Moreover, hospital networks operate on a 24-hour basis and are rarely taken down for maintenance and updating that might include patches for security holes. Ransomware attacks frequently take advantage of holes in networks that have not been patched with regular updates, and hospitals and medical centers are more likely than businesses in other industries to have failed to close those holes.”

ADA: “Dentists will have a more complete data set of the patient they are treating, enabling better care.”

Dr. Robert H. Ahlstrom, representing the American Dental Association and by default, all US dentists, in testimony before the National Committee on Vital and Health Statistics (NCVHS) on the benefits of EHRs in dentistry. His testimony is featured in an official document titled “Testimony of the American Dental Association, National Committee on Vital and Health Statistics Subcommittee on Standards and Security July 31, 2007.”

Click to access 070731p08.pdf

Insightful or clueless dentist?

Conclusion

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Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com

***

On Ethereum Smart Contracts

Breeding digital cats might help you figure out Ethereum

[By MIT Technology Review]

Bitcoin’s younger cousin has its own programming language that people can use to write so-called smart contracts, applications that run on processing power provided by computers on the network.

Confused?

A new game that lets you use Ethereum smart contracts to breed digital cats might help.

https://motherboard.vice.com/en_us/article/bj78jv/cryptokitties-blockchain-cats-axiom-zen-game?utm_campaign=21ae94a9da-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2017_10_24&utm_medium=email&utm_source=MIT+Technology+Review&utm_term=0_997ed6f472-21ae94a9da-154253973

Conclusion

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Speaker: If you need a moderator or speaker for an upcoming event, Dr. David E. Marcinko; MBA – Publisher-in-Chief of the Medical Executive-Post – is available for seminar or speaking engagements.

Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com

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***

Wi-Fi security is wide open to hackers

A flaw in the WPA2 protocol

[By MIT Technology Review]

Researchers have discovered a serious flaw in the WPA2 protocol that secures almost every modern Wi-Fi network. The vulnerability could allow hackers to inject malware into websites, or spy on people by reading information that was previously assumed to be encrypted.

The researchers say that “any correct implementation of WPA2 is likely affected,” with Android, Apple, and Windows software all said to be vulnerable. Security updates should fix the issue—when they’re ready to install.

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https://www.krackattacks.com/?utm_source=MIT+Technology+Review&utm_campaign=6d93d8c040-The_Download&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_997ed6f472-6d93d8c040-154253973

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Conclusion

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Speaker: If you need a moderator or speaker for an upcoming event, Dr. David E. Marcinko; MBA – Publisher-in-Chief of the Medical Executive-Post – is available for seminar or speaking engagements.

Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com

***

It’s time to put humans at the center of A.I.

More on Artificial Intelligence
By MIT Technology Rerview

“To make more helpful and useful machines, we’ve got to bring back the contextual understanding,” says Fei-Fei Li, chief scientist of Google Cloud, in an interview with MIT Technology Review.

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Read why she wants to inject some humanity into AI

https://www.technologyreview.com/s/609060/put-humans-at-the-center-of-ai/?utm_source=MIT+Technology+Review&utm_campaign=f21f8e4086-The_Download&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_997ed6f472-f21f8e4086-154253973

Conclusion

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Speaker: If you need a moderator or speaker for an upcoming event, Dr. David E. Marcinko; MBA – Publisher-in-Chief of the Medical Executive-Post – is available for seminar or speaking engagements.

Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com

Subscribe: MEDICAL EXECUTIVE POST for curated news, essays, opinions and analysis from the public health, economics, finance, marketing, I.T, business and policy management ecosystem.

Should Algorithms and Robots Mimic Empathy?

Should Algorithms and Robots Mimic Empathy?

By Bertalan Meskó MD PhD

Robots telling jokes and chatbots acting as life coaches sound astounding and terrifying at the same time. Extensive research is going on lately in the field of applying human features, emotions, gestures, and reactions to digital technology; and it raises thousands of questions.

Three Questions:

  • Could not only smart, but emotional algorithms or robots appear also in healthcare soon?
  • Would there be a place or need for them?
  • How would it impact the patient-doctor relationship or social interactions in general?

http://medicalfuturist.com/algorithms-robots-mimic-empathy/?utm_source=The+Medical+Futurist+Newsletter&utm_campaign=2da4036681-Newsletter_2014_07_177_17_2014&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_efd6a3cd08-2da4036681-399696053

Conclusion

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Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com

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***

On Consumer DNA Testing

Two states still resist consumer DNA testing

[By MIT Technology Review]

Earlier this month, 55,000 football fans were to receive a giveaway at a Baltimore Ravens game: not a T-shirt or a beer koozie, but a free DNA test. Ultimately, though, Maryland laws nixed the stunt.

Ronni Sandroff explains why.

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https://www.consumerreports.org/cro/news/2010/09/who-owns-your-dna/index.htm

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Conclusion

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Speaker: If you need a moderator or speaker for an upcoming event, Dr. David E. Marcinko; MBA – Publisher-in-Chief of the Medical Executive-Post – is available for seminar or speaking engagements.

Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com

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On Medical Data Provider Accuracy

Is there an app for that?

http://www.MCOL.com

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Conclusion

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***

Top Challenges Facing Healthcare Executives Today

Join Our Mailing List 

Are you ready in 2017?

http://www.MCOL.com

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Conclusion

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Update on EHR Rankings

Top Vendors

By http://www.MCOL.com and KLAS

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Conclusion

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***

The EQUIFAX hack; and me!

About the  massive computer hack

By Rick Kahler MS CFP®

The massive computer hack of Equifax, one of the three largest US credit reporting agencies, exposed the Social Security numbers, names, and contact information for up to 143 million of us.

How should you respond?

A lot of conflicting advice is floating around; here is what I am doing and what I would recommend:

  1. Go to EquifaxSecurity2017.com and enter your last name and the last six digits of your Social Security number to find out whether you are one of those potentially affected by the breach. There is a question on how accurate this is; one person entered their name as “test” and number as 123456, and was told they were affected by the breach.
  2. Consider (also through EquifaxSecurity2017.com) enrolling in Equifax’s free one-year credit monitoring service. Starting this process put me on a waiting list to actually sign up; I have until November 7 to complete the enrollment. I will wait to sign up until more is known. The fine print of that offer initially appeared to require waiving your right to join a class action lawsuit against the company. The website now reads: “In response to consumer inquiries, we have made it clear that the arbitration clause and class action waiver included in the Equifax and TrustedID Premier terms of use does not apply to this cybersecurity incident.”
  3. Monitor your bank accounts, credit card statements, and other financial information carefully for the next year. Immediately report any suspicious transactions.
  4. Do not rush out and buy identity theft insurance. The big winners out of this mess will be insurance companies that sell this protection, as millions will take out new policies. I do not plan to be one of them, as my opinion that identity theft insurance is of limited value has not changed.
  5. If a check of your Social Security number through Equifax’s website shows your information has potentially been compromised, you could consider canceling credit cards or closing bank accounts that may not protect you against fraud. However, most major credit cards and financial institutions will cover successful fraudulent attempts to use your account.
  6. Consider placing a free fraud alert on your account with the three major credit bureaus to warn creditors to verify your identity before issuing credit in your name. If you contact one agency, it is required to notify the others. You can also put a freeze on your credit, which blocks anyone (including you) from accessing your credit reports without your permission.
  7. Unfortunately, one of the best actions to take is one that none of us can easily do: change our Social Security numbers. It is possible to change one as a result of identity theft, but the application process requires evidence of serious ongoing problems.
  8. Consider contacting your Senators and Representatives to raise the issue of whether it’s time to discuss more flexibility around Social Security numbers. The good news is that elected officials may well be among the millions of us in this boat.

While Equifax has handled this debacle poorly (it took them a month to disclose it), they are not the only company that will suffer serious consequences. I see banks and credit card companies, who ultimately pay the tab for identity theft, as the biggest losers.

Assessment

This data breach potentially involves many people who have followed recommended strategies, such as using strong online passwords and guarding credit cards and account numbers, to protect against identity theft. I recommend following the Equifax story as it unfolds in the media, as it may have an impact on how you should safeguard your data in the future. 

Conclusion

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Dental EHRs are Coming to an End?

Dental EHRs are Coming to an End

By Darrell Pruitt DDS


The reckless third-party push for adoption of increasingly dangerous dental EHR systems is the most harmful scam in the history of dentistry.

But it’s almost over, Doc. Equifax was hacked.

“If a company like Equifax can make significant investments, have every incentive to keep the most sensitive kind of information secure, but still experience a breach … it stands to reason that our playbook needs a revision,”

Josh Mayfield: [Platform Specialist at Firemon Immediate Insight]. (See: “Equifax, U.S. consumers alike will struggle to overcome massive hack” By Tim Johnson for Mcclatchy, September 8, 2017).

Http://www.mcclatchydc.com/news/nation-world/national/national-security/article172078982.html

Why should anyone assume electronic dental records are any more secure than Equifax records?

Not only do digital health records subject Americans to increasing risk of medical identity theft – which can be lethal – but they are increasingly more expensive than paper dental records.

What’s more, electronic dental records offer dental patients NO TANGIBLE BENEFITS:  When is the last time you witnessed a practice advertise the benefits of digital records? On the other hand, you may have also noticed the appearance of paper files in the backgrounds of promotional photos.

A decade ago, I tried to persuade American Dental Association leadership to consider de-identification of dentists’ primary dental records. After all, if identities are unavailable, they simply cannot be stolen. ADA leadership summarily discarded the idea in favor of full disk encryption – which dentists summarily rejected in favor of luck …. And so here we are, Doc. “First, do no harm.”

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Dental EHR vendors simply will not survive transparency without fundamental changes in how patients’ welfare is guarded – which will further increase their cost and liability.

The future is obvious, yet I am the only dentist in the nation openly warning of the inevitable collapse of the electronic dental record industry. Unlike physicians, who treat four to five times as many patients a day and depend on quick interoperability with other physicians, dentists can safely return to paper. They won’t like the inconvenience of carbon paper, but following the Equifax breach of almost half of the nation’s consumers – virtually every one of them mad as hell – dentists will have no choice. Ehrs have become too costly.

Assessment

This week, a dentist on Facebook who tried but failed to defend the censorship habits of a popular dental consultant said I was on a “one-man crusade.” I don’t think he meant it in the good way. I ask you to remember that remark for future reference.

Conclusion

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Are you ready to secure patient data?

Join Our Mailing List

The Challenge of Managing Member Identities

By http://www.MCOL.com

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Conclusion

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OUR OTHER PRINT BOOKS AND RELATED INFORMATION SOURCES:

  Risk Management, Liability Insurance, and Asset Protection Strategies for Doctors and Advisors: Best Practices from Leading Consultants and Certified Medical Planners™

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Healthcare Technology in the News

Join Our Mailing List

By Staff Reporters

Healthcare consumers show mounting interest in virtual, on-demand care
Fierce Healthcare, August 14, 2017

Transforming the mHealth Experience With Digital Health Assistants
HIT Consultant, August 14, 2017

Google buys smartphone health monitoring startup Senosis
Pharma Phorum, August 14, 2017

Could Trump’s Opioid Emergency Boost Telemedicine, mHealth Use?
mHealth Intelligence, August 11, 2017

Trump Administration Takes on VA Telehealth Opportunities
The Natonal Law Review, August 11, 2017

More and more businesses are offering telehealth services as an employee benefit
MedCity News, August 9, 2017

VR Glasses Give Doctors a New mHealth Tool to Treat Concussions
mHealth Intelligence, July 31, 2017

New Senate bill seeks to reduce restrictions on telemedicine use
MobiHealth News, July 31, 2017

The allure of health care for tech giants
Axios, July 20, 2017

Conclusion

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America’s embarrassing digital divide

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An FCC rule change could falsely obscure America’s embarrassing digital divide

[By MIT Technology Review]

FCC chairman Ajit Pai has a theory. He reckons that Internet access on a phone is as good as high-speed broadband access at home.

Now he’s looking into changing his agency’s guidelines, so that places in the U.S. with decent mobile coverage are deemed “connected,” even if broadband access is a no-go. If enacted, the sleight of hand could shrink America’s embarrassing digital divide, but would leave rural folks with tight data caps, low speeds, and less hope for ever getting broadband.

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Conclusion

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Health Information Technology [EMR] Update

2014 to 2017

 

 

 

 

 

 

By D. Kellus Pruitt DDS

Three years ago

“When Patients Fear EHR – When patients believe paper medical records are safer and more private than electronic ones, their health can suffer. Many members of the public mistakenly believe electronic health records (ehrs) are less secure than paper files. Magnified by misinformation and political distortion of facts, an unnecessary fear has taken root in the minds of many consumers — often with serious consequences.” 

-Mansur Hasib

Cybersecurity Professional – Author and Speaker in commentary for informationweek, July 28, 2014

Http://www.informationweek.com/healthcare/electronic-health-records/when-patients-fear-ehr/a/d-id/1297519

This week 

“Doctors claim medical records system puts patient safety at risk – PROBLEMS with Queensland Health’s electronic medical record system are angering health workers, with fed-up senior doctors circulating a document slamming the technology and those in charge of it.”

-Kara Vickery and Janelle Miles – The Courier-Mail, July 25, 2017.

Http://www.couriermail.com.au/news/queensland/doctors-claim-medical-records-system-puts-patient-safety-at-risk/news-story/dc18cb388552eb4d179629c298a28408

“300,000 records breached in ransomware attack on Pennsylvania health system – The breach on Women’s Health Care Group of Pennsylvania was discovered in May, but hackers had unauthorized access to the system as early as January.”

-Jessica Davis – Health Care IT News, July 26, 2017

Http://www.healthcareitnews.com/news/300000-records-breached-ransomware-attack-pennsylvania-health-system

“HIPAA Data Breaches, Cyber Attacks Reported by 47% of Orgs – KPMG found that there was a 10 percentage point increase in reported HIPAA data breaches or cyber attacks from 2015 to 2017.”

-Elizabeth Snell – Health IT Security, July 27, 2017

Https://healthitsecurity.com/news/hipaa-data-breaches-cyber-attacks-reported-by-47-of-orgs

“Doctors frustrated that electronic records steal time from patients – Dr. Rebekah Gardner has to make a choice each time she sees a patient in her Rhode Island office: she can scroll computer screens and click boxes, or she can focus on the patient and take home the computer work.”

-Ronnie Cohen – Reuters, July 28, 2017

Http://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-records-electronics-iduskbn1ad2gt

“Plastic Surgery Associates data breach: Patients’ records, payment card details possibly compromised – The company said it discovered that some of its systems were infected with ransomware in February.”

-Hyacinth Mascarenhas – International Business Times, July 29, 2017

Http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/plastic-surgery-associates-data-breach-patients-records-payment-card-details-possibly-compromised-1632555

Conclusion

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Update on Social Determinants of Health Data Usage

SDOH is “Hot” in  Healthcare Today

http://www.MCOL.com

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Conclusion

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The Blockchain Book for Healthcare

Author Q & A

By staff reporters 

Peter B. Nichol, managing director of OROCA Innovations, is one of the world’s foremost experts in healthcare and blockchain technology.

He is also the author of the recently released book “The Power of Blockchain for Healthcare.”

In light of his expertise and the publication of this new book, here is a brief interview with Nichol on the current landscape for blockchain technology in healthcare as well as the trends he expects to see emerging in this budding space.

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Conclusion

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Risk Management, Liability Insurance, and Asset Protection Strategies for Doctors and Advisors: Best Practices from Leading Consultants and Certified Medical Planners™    Risk Management, Liability Insurance, and Asset Protection Strategies for Doctors and Advisors: Best Practices from Leading Consultants and Certified Medical Planners™

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The Top Medical Specialties with the Biggest Potential in the Future

The Medical Futurist

[By Bertalan Meskó, MD PhD]

Some say technology will replace 80% of doctors in the future. I disagree.

Instead, technology will finally allow doctors to focus on what makes them good physicians: treating patients and innovating, while automation does the repetitive part of the work.

While every specialty will benefit from digital health, some will especially thrive due to these innovations.

Here, I enlisted the medical fields with the biggest potential for development in the future. Read more.

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Conclusion

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Machines Playing Doctor?

The Machines Are Getting Ready to Play Doctor

Bert Mesko

[By Bertalan Meskó, MD PhD]

A team of researchers at Stanford University, led by Andrew Ng, a prominent AI researcher and an adjunct professor there, has shown that a machine-learning model can identify heart arrhythmias from an electrocardiogram (ECG) better than an expert.

Read more

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Conclusion

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Chance of leading Pharma companies producing a successful app has decreased from 2.0% (2014) to 0.5% (2016)

Pharma Report Findings

By David Ireland Berlin

[Research2Guidance ]

Leading Pharma companies continue to struggle to gain significant reach (downloads) within their target groups. While companies have cumulatively over doubled their number of active apps available on Apple App and Google Play stores (2014 – Q1 2017), most have added to the growing tail of under performers.

Why is it that Pharma companies continue to struggle in mhealth?

Have they showed other signs of improvement within their app portfolios, or through 3rd party digital eco-systems?

Only 0.5% of all apps published by the leading 12 Pharma companies have managed to achieve annual downloads of over 100K; one of the major findings from the recently published, 2nd edition Pharma App Benchmarking 2017 report by Research2Guidance.

The report builds on figures identified from the previous edition, released in 2014. It also explores the leading 3rd party digital innovation strategies, their components, and their successfulness in terms of benefits (ROI, reach etc.). While companies have on average increased their app portfolio sizes from 65 to 153, average per app annual downloads remain low at just 3.3K.

Here are three of the main reasons why:

1. Companies are competing against a growing number of mhealth competitors. According to the 2016 mhealth Developer Economics Report, there were 290K mhealth apps listed on major app stores, an increase of +174K since 2014. Annual mhealth app download growth rates are also decreasing, adding to the growing pressure.

2. Pharma app portfolios have a narrower target audience than their mhealth competitors. App portfolios of Pharma companies differ from the average mhealth app portfolio in the greater degree to which they supply apps for HCP use cases. When comparing the app categorization differences between Pharma and mhealth, Pharma tends to target a greater share of patients over healthy individuals. This in turn decreases their potential target audience, making it harder to generate downloads.

3. Apps, on average, still fall behind their mhealth competitors in terms of product quality. Pharma app portfolios are not achieving the reach and retention experienced by the average mhealth provider. Inconsistencies of design elements and cross-referencing between apps are still far too common, and continue to let Pharma app quality down.

With the hype of, for example, Artificial Intelligence (AI), Augmented Reality (AR), Virtual Reality (VR), connected devices and sensors mounting throughout the digital health industry, consumers are simply demanding more usability from their mhealth products and services.

Life-Cycles

Traditional Pharma product production life-cycles are simply incompatible when dealing with their digital offerings, given the rate of technological change. However, there are a few instances whereby Pharma companies have achieved some success with their internal app publishing.

Johnson&Johnson for example have published three of the five most downloaded Pharma apps for 2016; J&J Official 7 Minute Workout and onetouch Reveal. All three achieved over 200K downloads for 2016. The success of their leading apps has improved their portfolios overall performance in comparison to 2014.

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All leading Pharma companies have grown their internal app portfolio size since 2014, and all but two (Abbott and Sanofi) have increased their reach.

However, thanks to the growing app portfolio size of Bayer and Novartis, and the high downloads of J&J, half of the leading Pharma companies have portfolios that fall below the average-lines. Previously, this was the case for five companies.

Taking J&J as an example, the success of a mere two or three apps can result in Pharma app market leadership.

Take Sanofi as another example. With the hype of Sanofi’s previous most downloaded app coming to an end (GoMeals), their internal app portfolio has experienced a significant decrease in annual downloads in comparison to 2014. Their portfolio has now fallen to 4th place in terms of reach behind J&J, Bayer and GSK. Novartis, Sanofi and Bayer have made the most significant strides in their app publishing activities, but are not seeing the ROI in the way of market penetration.

The newly released Pharma report goes into more company level detail on supply and demand from a platform, category, use-case and user-retention perspective. The report also analyses the 3rd party digital eco-system activities and strategies of these companies. Some appear to be relying more heavily on their 3rd party channels to source digital innovation than others, and their achievements to date give insight into which channels create the most potential for overall benefit to the Pharma company. These benefits can range from, for example, brand image improvement, digital innovation adoption, and new product distribution channels.

Assessment

Find out more about the app portfolios and digital strategies of leading Pharma companies by downloading your copy of the report today. Click here to find out more about what’s inside.                                                                                                          

Conclusion

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Meet Don Rucker MD – The New NCHIT for the US-HHS

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National Coordinator for Health Information Technology

[By staff reporters]

We are pleased to announce that Don Rucker has been named the new National Coordinator for Health Information Technology at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).

Dr. Rucker, a physician leader with national clinical informatics success, has a strong scientific, computational and practical background in medical computing and decision sciences, he was a co-developer of the first Microsoft Windows based electronic medical record in the world.

Additionally, Dr. Rucker was a designer of the computerized physician order entry [CPOE] module that won the 2003 HIMSS Nicholas Davies Award as the best hospital computer system in the US.

Conclusion

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EHRs, ADA Leaders and Conflict of Interest

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A decade later ….?


By D. Kellus Pruitt DDS

In July 2007, Dr. Robert H. Ahlstrom, representing the American Dental Association and by default, all US dentists, testified before the National Committee on Vital and Health Statistics (NCVHS) on the benefits of EHRs in dentistry.

His testimony is featured in an official document titled:

“Testimony of the American Dental Association, National Committee on Vital and Health Statistics Subcommittee on Standards and Security July 31, 2007

http://www.ncvhs.hhs.gov/070731p08.pdf

Here are the ADA’s 11 selling points which Dr. Ahlstrom presented to HHS in support of electronic dental records:

  1. Dental office computer systems will be compatible with those of the hospitals and plans they conduct business with. Referral inquiries will be handled easily.
  2. Vendors will be able to supply low-cost software solutions to physicians/dentists who support standards-based electronic data interchange. Costs associated with mailing, faxing and telephoning will decrease.
  3. All administrative tasks can be accomplished electronically. Dentists will have more time to devote to direct care.
  4. Dentists will have a more complete data set of the patient they are treating, enabling better care.
  5. Patients seeking information on enrollment status or health care benefits will be given more accurate, complete and easier-to-understand information.
  6. Consumer documents will be more uniform and easier to read.
  7. Cost savings to providers and plans will translate in less costly health care for consumers. Premiums and charges will be lowered.
  8. Patients will save postage and telephone costs incurred in claims follow-up.
  9. Patients will have the ability to see what is contained in their medical and dental records and who has accessed them. Patient records will be adequately protected through organizational policies and technical security controls.
  10. Visits to dentists and other health care providers will be shorter without the burden of filling out forms.
  11. Consumer correspondence with insurers about problems with claims will be reduced.

Not one of Ahlstrom’s 11 promises has been fulfilled. None …. Total failure!

A decade later, it has become clear that the nation was misled by ambitious leaders of the American Dental Association who have since enjoyed power and/or profit from members’ misinformed adoption of digital records.

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 In my opinion, the grandest deception in the history of dentistry is clearly a result of a secretive not-for-profit corporation’s conflict of interest. This very important business lesson would have been lost to history if I hadn’t been documenting the true progress of EHRs in dentistry.

I (alone?) recognized very early that paperless was doomed simply because the needs of dentists and their patients was secondary to implementation of third-parties’ half-baked, selfish ideas. And I got spanked for that by the same ADA leadership behind Ahlstrom’s tainted testimony to Congress.

My ADA membership was suspended, and I still have not been told why. All the President of the Texas Dental Association would tell me is, “You know what you did.”

Assessment 

To this day, dental EHRs are both increasingly less secure than paper dental records as well as increasingly more expensive. What’s more, they offer no tangible benefits for the patients. ADA leadership failed my profession.

Transparency is accountability.

Conclusion

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How actress Hedy Lamarr became the ‘Mother of Wi-Fi’

The ‘Mother of ‘Wi-Fi’ ?

By Dr. David Marcinko MBA

Known as “the most beautiful woman in the world,” Hollywood actress Hedy Lamarr starred in dozens of films over a career that spanned decades.

She died in 2000. But, there was more to Lamarr than met the eye.

An avid inventor, she worked on everything from a tablet that, when dropped into water, fizzed into instant cola, to frequency hopping — a World War II-era secure communications technology that’s used today in wireless internet, GPS and cell-phones.

Link: https://www.engadget.com/2017/05/01/the-forgotten-mother-of-wifi/

Assessment

We’ve written about tech luminaries like Grace Hopper, Alan Turing, Ada Lovelace and Steve Jobs on the ME-P before. But, this curated essay takes our admiration to the next level.

Conclusion

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HITECH: A politically-correct Scam?

Update on HITECH

By Kellus Pruitt DDS

“How bad science can lead to bad science journalism — and bad policy – This is what happens when news organizations don’t catch lousy studies.”

By Stephen Soumerai and Ross Koppel for The Washington Post, June 7, 2017/

Https://www.washingtonpost.com/posteverything/wp/2017/06/07/how-bad-science-can-lead-to-bad-science-journalism-and-bad-policy/?Utm_term=.631e0a2d022c#comments

Soumerai and Koppel:  “As researchers who focus on health care, we see news coverage of badly designed studies constantly. And we’re concerned that breathless reporting on bad science can result in costly, ineffective and even harmful national policies.”

You mean like HITECH?

Since the HITECH Act was passed in 2009, it has been well-documented that not only were the premises of the law fiction, but the law itself has always favored healthcare stakeholders like Cerner at the expense of patients and their doctors – the healthcare principals.

The grandest blunder in medical history gained traction in 1999 with an Institute of Medicine (IOM) report titled, “To Err is Human,” which promises that EHRs should have already saved 100,000 lives a year … Not even close. Not unlike the dangerous research bias described in Soumerai and Koppel’s article that was posted recently, several researchers have also pointed out that the studies cited in the IOM report did not show that people were dying from medical errors that health information technology could detect or correct.

The questionable IOM report was followed in 2005 by a tainted RAND Corporation report which promised savings of $77 billion annually… Wrong again!

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Shortly after the report was published, rumors quickly spread that the data for the study were cherry-picked by those with software to sell. By 2011, the passage of time revealed that RAND had clearly made a vendor-friendly mistake, forcing RAND to disown their study – but not before its optimistic conclusion was instrumental in the successful passage of the HITECH Act in 2009 (two years after Minnesota lawmakers had already passed the doomed EHR mandate based on the same tainted RAND results).

Political Fiat

Then presidential candidate Hillary Clinton was only one of many lawmakers to quote the RAND study. Almost everyone the nation was suckered in. Ultimately, it was revealed that the study’s vendor-friendly conclusion was largely financed by software giant Cerner, who continues to profit from years of misinformation.

(See: “In 2nd Look, Few Savings From Digital Records,” by Reed Abelson and Julie Creswell, New York Times, Jan. 10, 2013).

Http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/11/business/electronic-records-systems-have-not-reduced-health-costs-report-says.html

In fact, it was announced last Monday that Cerner, which is responsible for the most dishonest research in the history of health information technology, has been awarded the Department of Veterans Affairs contract for the VA’s next-generation electronic health records system.

Assessment

Dishonesty wins.

Conclusion

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10 Breakthrough Technologies 2017

Including in Medicine

By MIT Technology Review

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These breakthrough technologies will affect the economy and our politics, improve medicine, or influence our culture.

Some are here now; others will take a decade to develop. But you should know about all of them right now.

See the List

Conclusion

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Why patients will soon prefer paper dental records?

Read for yourself why dental patients will soon prefer paper-based over paperless

[By Kellus Pruitt DDS]

Recently, Marianne Kolbasuk McGee (HealthInfoSec) posted, “Analysis: Are HHS Cybersecurity Recommendations Achievable? Experts Sort Through New Task Force Report.”

http://www.healthcareinfosecurity.com/analysis-are-hhs-cybersecurity-recommendations-achievable-a-9971

McGee: 

“A new Department of Health and Human Services report to Congress containing more than 100 recommendations for how healthcare can better address cybersecurity threats is stirring debate over whether smaller organizations will be able to take the recommended actions.”

Cha-ching!

Privacy attorney David Holtzman, vice president of compliance at the consultancy CynergisTek, tells Healthinfosec:

“The majority of information systems that create or maintain personally identifiable health information are owned and managed by small organizations whose capability or access to the people or technology to secure information systems is limited by financial constraints or ability to attract well-trained human resources,” he says. “At first glance, it is difficult to see how these small organizations can translate the recommendations in the report into tangible progress.”

As large, juicy healthcare organizations successfully harden their cyber-defenses, small healthcare entities – like dental offices – will attract identity thieves with smaller, juicy low-hanging fruit.

Or, as suggested in the article, taxpayers can subsidize cyber-protection for dentists and other small healthcare organizations. In my opinion, that simply won’t happen.

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Wary dental patients – many of whom have received breach notifications or have learned about identity theft the hard way – will find it increasingly easy to find a new dentist who does not put their identities on computers. After all, electronic dental records offer dental patients no tangible benefits anyway.

Assessment

If dental patients’ identities are unavailable, they cannot be stolen …. Still too early for de-identification, Doc? Give it time. I’ve got patience. 

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Conclusion

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Anatomy of Medical Device Cyber Attacks

On Cyber Attacks

[By Bertran Mesko, MD PhD]

According to studies by PWC and the SANS Institute, 94% of healthcare organizations have been victims of a cyber-attack.

As we use more and more devices from smartphones to wearable sensors, your online privacy can have a very real impact on our health and well-being. When hacked, even simple wearables can yield private information about our vital signs and reveal personal health problems and insight into our habits (like when we regularly go running) that’s best kept from the public eye.

More threatening are the findings of security researchers who managed to prove that a deadly overdose of medication could be administered remotely via a vulnerability in certain insulin pumps.

HIT Dangers

Let’s see the dangers facing our health information, and a few easy tips you can use to boost your privacy levels quickly.

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The dangers facing healthcare privacy

Assessment

Arxan recently surveyed trends and dangers threatening the privacy of healthcare data.

Conclusion

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Dictionary of Health Insurance and Managed Care

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Peering at a high-frequency stock trading algorithm

On high-frequency trading algorithms

[By MIT Technology Review]

Readers – Here’s your chance to peer under the hood of a high-frequency trading algorithm. Or try your luck at setting up automated trades in a simulated stock market.

And plenty moreit’s part of the Wall Street Journal’s so-far-excellent series, “The Quants” on how technology has changed, and continues to change, Wall Street in ways both good and profitable … for some people, anyway.

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Conclusion

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Comprehensive Financial Planning Strategies for Doctors and Advisors: Best Practices from Leading Consultants and Certified Medical Planners™

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MSFT makes use of the densest data storage medium in the universe?

On Microsoft R&D

By MIT Technology Review

 

DNA

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The company MSFT Corp., thinks DNA, a building block of life, is the future of data storage. It says it could have a “proto-commercial system” up and running in three years.

DNA is incredibly efficient at encoding data—it could store every movie ever made in a volume smaller than a sugar cube.

Assessment: Antonio Regalado reports, Microsoft thinks it won’t be long before the molecule becomes a building block of data centers, too.

Conclusion

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A simple tweak could unlock the Web for millions of people

International Corporation for Assigned Names

By MIT Technology Review

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The letters to the right of the dot in a URL look harmless, but for many users they’re a barrier. In 2011, the International Corporation for Assigned Names decided to grow the number of top-level domains from 12 to 1,200, including some that use non-Latin characters.
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But that revealed a problem: many applications simply don’t recognize those new characters. Our own Mike Orcutt explains how a simple tweak could change that and help millions of people use the Internet more effectively.
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Conclusion

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First [Medical] Impressions Matter

Driving Consumer Engagement

http://www.MCOL.com

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Conclusion

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On digital health accelerator and corporate start-up programs

Most digital health accelerator and corporate start-up programs must refocus to survive

By Markus Pohl

Berlin, March 29, 2017

The hype around programs that connect start-ups with corporates and investors in digital health has peaked.

For two years running, the number of new accelerator programs has decreased. A lot of accelerator programs are having problems in attracting enough high quality start-ups to justifying budgets from their partner or parent companies. Many digital health accelerator programs will have to change along four dimensions to survive.  

Update 2017

At the beginning of 2017 there were over 340 early stage investors; i.e. accelerators and incubators investing in healthcare start-ups. The growth rate of new accelerators and incubators entering the market has slowed substantially over the last two years. Nearly all of these programs target digital business models.

There are over 15,000 start-ups based on a mobile app business model. This means that there are less than 50 mobile health app start-ups per accelerator! There are just not enough start-ups out there to cater for the demand of 340+ accelerators and incubators. Especially for the rather small and unknown accelerators, which are overshadowed by the regionally well-known programs such as Plug and Play, StartUp Health and Rockstart.   The number of targeted digital health start-ups per accelerator is insufficient for most accelerators to build up a high-quality selection funnel.

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While it is true, that most start-ups will apply for multiple accelerator programs, usually accelerators need to go through several hundred of applications before they can find a candidate that fits to their program.

Assessment

After talking to many digital health accelerators in preparation for this year’s mHealth App Developer Economics Survey (now live: click here), one common problem that stood out was that accelerators struggle to build up a high-quality selection funnel. With the majority of accelerators somewhat struggling for good quality applicants, how is it going to be possible for these programs to survive?

Conclusion

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Q&A with Futurist Martine Rothblatt

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[By MIT Technology Review]

Whether machines and artificial intelligence will ever become conscious is an eternally debated topic, but Martine Rothblatt thinks it shouldn’t be.

We talked with Rothblatt about why she thinks denying that machines will become conscious is similar to denying evolution, and why society must prepare to grant rights to the virtual beings of the future.

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brain+function

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Q&A with Futurist Martine Rothblatt

Conclusion

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BoMP

http://www.BusinessofMedicalPractice.com

One Man’s Quest to Hack His Own Genes

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A Repost by Antonio Regalado

When Brian Hanley set out to test a gene therapy, he started with himself

When Brian Hanley set out to test a new gene therapy, he needed a subject. So, he started with … himself.

In a plastic surgeon’s office in Davis, California, Hanley had genes, which he had designed himself, injected into his thigh. The hope: they would make his body produce more of a potent hormone that would hopefully increase his strength, stamina, and life span.

Hanley has a PhD in microbiology, but his experiment is independent, unapproved by the FDA, and funded by savings. He claims to be “informed consent personified,” while ethicists argue that “experimenting with yourself is a very, very deep conflict of interest.”

Our own Antonio Regalado met Hanley to find out why he did it, what he thinks his project could prove—and how he prepared for the possibility of something going wrong.

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Conclusion

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2016 – 2019 Medical Innovation Summit

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Hosted by the Cleveland Clinic

By A. Schreiber

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Conclusion

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Technology and Health Knowledge — Global Health information Technology

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Technology and Health Knowledge

By Kelsey and Will

I remember back in 2010 we had our annual family reunion in Arkansas at my grandparents house. My grandfather was in his rocking chair watching T.V as I sat on the couch completely engaged in whatever I was doing on my cell phone.

My grandfather looks over at me and asks, “What you got there […]

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Technology and Health Knowledge — Global Health information Technology

Conclusion

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A Clever Rap Anthem About Electronic Health Records

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On EHRs

A Re-Post Report by Jaan Sidorov

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broken PC

Clever Rap Anthem About Electronic Health Records

Assessment

ZDoggMD makes some good points, slips in a sly reference about one EHR provider and salutes another.

Ten years that have passed since he wrote this article, and we still have a way to go.

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Is this Really: A [Healthcare] Social Media Impact Factor?

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In Medicine?

@nicholas_bagley

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social-media-impact

via Tom Gauld:@afrakt

 Social media impact factor

More:

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HIPAA Cloud Solutions?

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On New-Wave Technology

Carol S. Miller

By Carol Miller RN MBA

To help hospitals and health systems comply with Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act regulations, best practices are emerging for securing all electronic communication – cloud, wireless, and texting – of protected health information.

These new technologies will continually be evolving with hospitals, providers and patients move to new means of communication.  Below is a description of one.

Cloud Solutions

Cloud solutions are becoming a needed commodity in treating patients today but also present a risk to privacy and security violation.  Despite the advantages of cloud computing, organizations are often hesitant to use it because of concerns about security and compliance.

Specifically, they fear potential unauthorized access to patient data and the accompanying liability and reputation damage resulting from the need to report HIPAA breaches. While these concerns are understandable, a review of data on HIPAA breaches published by the HHS shows that these concerns are misplaced.

In fact, by using a cloud-based service with an appropriate security and compliance infrastructure, a facility can significantly reduce its compliance risk.

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Business-Associate Agreements

Because HIPAA compliance involves stringent privacy and security protections for electronic health information (PHI), many cloud providers are balking at signing new Business-Associate agreements.

Assessment

Most cloud-technology providers, such as Box and Dropbox, do not include the built-in privacy protections that guarantee HIPAA compliance. Because many cloud storage companies store plaintext data on their servers, PHI is especially vulnerable to breaches and compliance violations. 

Conclusion

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The dangers facing healthcare privacy

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The dangers facing healthcare privacy

Arxan recently surveyed trends and dangers threatening the privacy of healthcare data.

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arxan_anatomy_of_med_device_attacks

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Wearable Technology as Medical Devices Revolutionize Healthcare

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By Salisu Bala Bello

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White Paper: Wearable Technology as Medical Devices Revolutionize healthcare

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Generational Attitudes Toward HIT

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By http://www.MCOL.com

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graphoid101916

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MORE: foreword-mata-2

MORE: Glossary IT Terms

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The mHealth app Market is getting CROWDED

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There are 259,000 mHealth apps now

ralfBy Ralf-Gordon Jahns

ralf.jahns@research2guidance.com

Almost 100,000 mHealth apps have been added since the beginning of last year, amounting to 259,000 currently available on major app stores. In addition, 13,000 mHealth publishers have entered the market since the beginning of 2015, totaling 58,000. The largest global study on mHealth app publishing reveals a massive increase in competition in the mHealth app market.

The results of this year’s mHealth App Developer Economics 2016 study show a steep increase in competition level among mHealth app publishers. The supply side of mHealth apps is measured in the number of available apps and publishers. They are growing significantly faster than the demand side which is quantified by the number of mHealth app downloads. The number of mHealth apps and active mHealth app publishers has seen strong growth since 2015. This year, the total number of mHealth apps listed on major app stores across the globe grew by 57% to 259,000 apps.

“This impressive growth is based on three main developments; the growing number of mHealth app publishers, the increased importance of multi-platform app publishing and the expansion of existing mHealth app portfolios”

The number of mHealth app publishers grew in line with the number of apps. There are currently 58,000 mHealth app publishers app on major app stores, 28% more since the beginning of 2015. There appears to be no immediate end to the number of companies rushing into the market to launch their first mHealth app. Multi-platform publishing also contributes to the growth on the supply side of the mHealth app market.

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Currently 75% of mHealth publishers are developing their mHealth apps both on iOS and Android platforms. Multi-platform publishing is even more significant for HTML5 and Windows Phone developers, however these platforms are still niche and don’t contribute a lot to the overall number of mHealth apps yet.

In contrast, growth rates of mHealth app store downloads are estimated to be only +7% in 2016, having been +35% the previous year, reaching a total of 3.2B in 2016. This is in line with other app market categories and reflects the fact that growth of capable devices that can download apps has slowed down in most western countries. As a consequence of this increased competition, it will be even more difficult to stand out and gain significant downloads. Only 14% of mHealth app publishers generated more than 100,000 downloads with their mHealth app portfolio in one year. This share increased only marginally by 3pp since 2014.

“Consumers are still downloading mHealth apps because they have heard about them or found them in the app store” explains Audrone Skardziute, Analyst at research2guidance. “The next push on the demand side will come from recommendations of traditional healthcare companies that are pushing apps to their employees or members.”

With hundreds of new mHealth apps released daily, companies have to consider their app launch as if it were a familiar product in a saturated market. The mHealth Developer Economics 2016 research program is the largest research program about mHealth app publishing. This year more than 2,600 mHealth app developers and decision makers participated and shared their experiences and views about the mHealth app market. There is much more and we will continue to write about the results of the study. Read the full report to see all results.

MORE: Download the free 28 page report here.

About

research2guidance is a Berlin-based mobile app economy specialist. The company’s service offerings include app strategy consulting, market studies and research.

Link to the report:

http://research2guidance.com/product/mhealth-app-developer-economics-2016/

Link to the blog post: http://research2guidance.com/2016/10/11/mhealth-app-market-getting-crowded-259000-mhealth-apps-now/ Link to the image: http://research2guidance.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/10/It-is-getting-crowded.png

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Navigating Health Care Integrated Delivery Networks

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It’s Complicated

http://www.MCOL.com

*** infographic100516

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The State of Health Information Technology

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In Six Visuals

By Venture Scanner

The-State-of-Health-Technology

[Double-Click to Enlarge]

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http://www.HealthDictionarySeries.org

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Hippocrates and the Internet

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Langan MD[By Ira Nash MD via Michael Lawrence Langan MD]

The Hofstra Northwell School of Medicine recently graduated its second class. The commencement was a wonderful “feel-good” event, complete with beautiful weather, happy graduates and proud families…

Hippocrates and the Internet

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The Age of Technology 2006-2016

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By Public Company Market Capitalization

[via Bertalan Meskó, MD, PhD]

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ext

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