Update On Medical Smartphone Apps

Offering a Window Of Opportunity For M-Health Service Providers

By Markus Pohl

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The potential revenue that could be made in the mobile healthcare app market is just a fraction of the total integrated healthcare market. Service providers within the healthcare market have a window of opportunity with the possibilities that the mobile apps market offers right now.

The benefits of integrated electronic and mobile healthcare solutions are evident. At the moment there is a lot of potential for companies to scale up their services and learn how to adapt to the changing market. But they have to act quickly to seize the moment. In the last few years those solutions either remained as isolated pilots or struggled with all kinds of barriers from healthcare stakeholders, with only a few exceptions.

Integrated Solutions 

As it is not clear when integrated solutions will become widely accepted around the globe, more and more e-health and m-health service provides are rethinking their strategy. They are turning away from complex and integrated solutions that need acceptance of all national healthcare stakeholders to more simple patient centric services.

m-Health Services Rising

This rethinking process goes hand in hand with the rise of the smartphone app market. In the next 5 years the smartphone app market will help the mobile healthcare industry to reach a new level. mHealth apps will be widely used and will demonstrate the technological possibilities of smartphones. Technology, educated patients/doctors and proof of cost savings for health insurance providers will eventually allow companies to make money with mhealth apps.

Before the smartphone app market brought new life to the mobile healthcare market, mHealth service providers struggled to scale up their solutions. Most of them never made it out of the trial stage. Some of them were just too basic, such as simple pill reminders running on SMS as the primary delivery technology. More complex solutions that were based on eHealth initiatives integrated the features of a mobile device with a database (electronic health records), but failed mainly because of political barriers and low awareness amongst patients.

Assessment 

For more information on the smartphone based mHealth market and its business opportunities for healthcare provides please see our latest report on the mHealth market: “Mobile Health Market Report 2010-2015”.

Contact:

research2guidance

+49 30 609 893 363

markus.pohl@research2guidance.com

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Smartphone Apps Market Model Takes mHealth Market to New Level

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Will mobile apps become the killer application of the mHealth market?

By Markus Pohl                                                                                   

research2guidance / The Mobile Research Specialists

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email: mp@research2guidance.com

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Dear Dr. Marcinko,  

New research by research2guidance concludes that mobile applications and the new smartphone market model will help the mHealth market to reach a new level. The mHealth market will develop from a trial market to a global market, which is about to realize its full potential.

A Long Time Topic 

mHealth solutions have been discussed since the end of the 90s. There were very positive market projections indicating that the mHealth market would soon become a billion Dollar market at that time. But the market never really took off. What stopped the early mHealth market from being successful?

In the last years a new market model has been created by Apple: The mobile applications eco-system. Can this new system ignite the market development that everybody has been expecting for the last years? Will smartphone apps become the killer application of the mHealth market?

Barriers to Entry

The following list shows the main barriers which prevented the mHealth market from growing in the past and the changes the new model will bring:

1. Devices: Early solution providers had to live with limited device capabilities and in order to achieve successful market entry and profitability had to find hardware partners to develop the mobile device. Furthermore, reach was very limited for any kind of smarter phone. Many of the features that early solutions providers had to find special solutions for are now included as standard on smartphones (e.g. GPS or sensors). Reach of smartphones, although limited today, won’t be in 2 years time with the number of smartphone users projected to be 1 in 2013.

2. Distribution: In the early days mHealth solutions providers had to seek partnerships with MNOs in order to gain some support with the distribution of the service or had to do it on their own. The new market model offers global reach without having to deal with an MNO.  Still, traditional distribution channels like doctors, hospitals and health insurance providers are not being affected by the new model.

3. Patients and doctors: The awareness of mHealth solutions was very limited. The new market model offers a better user experience along the entire value chain: discovery and access, billing and usage. The hype for smartphone apps also brings mHealth apps into the spotlight of its potential users. Still, one of the biggest target groups for mHealth solutions, the elderly, will have the biggest issues with technology adoption, although they would benefit most from mHealth application usage. This mismatch will not be changed by the new market model in the near future.

4. Regulations: The new market model has only limited impact on one of the key barriers regulation. As long as mHealth solutions and services don’t get clearance from national regulators and are thus not reimbursable by health insurance providers, patients must pay expenses them-selves. Doctors won’t prescribe e.g. a pill reminder application and will have no financial incentive to propose such solutions to the majority of their patients. The market will remain a consumer driven market, which means that the full potential will remain untapped.  Another barrier remains the discussion around security and confidentiality of data. Major projects like electronic health records have been mandated a decade ago in some countries but implementation has been delayed until now mainly because of security and confidentiality reasons.

The findings are a part of a new report by market research institute research2guidance about the global mHealth market. The report analyzes in detail the impact of the new market model, the business opportunities for mHealth app publishers, and how the market will look like in 2015 and will be published at the end of October 2010

Assessment 

Link to related blog post: http://www.research2guidance.com/will-smartphone-apps-become-the-killer-application-of-the-mhealth-market/

Link to graph: http://www.research2guidance.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/10/Barriers.jpg

For more information please contact:

Robert Krsten,

email: rk@research2guidance.com

phone: +49 30 60 989 3366

web: www.research2guidance.com

Conclusion

Your thoughts and comments on this ME-P are appreciated. Feel free to review our top-left column, and top-right sidebar materials, links, URLs and related websites, too. Then, subscribe to the ME-P. It is fast, free and secure.

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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