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- How mobile apps can be doctors’ ‘virtual assistants’
Posted by : Unknown
Saturday, October 11, 2014
Apple’s Health app may have grabbed plenty of headlines since its recent launch, but there’s plenty of other app innovation happening across the healthcare industry.
Mobile phone applications, for example, are serving as “VIRTUAL ASSISTANTS
“This is an excellent application of technology,” said Dr. Steven Levine, a neurologist who serves as the chief of neurology at the University Hospital of Brooklyn and the associate dean for CLINICAL RESEARCH
An eyeful of information
This is all part of an innovative trend in medicine that enables doctors’ offices to become more focused on their patients’ needs. Patients require education, for example, on how to take new medicines, when to take them, and what to avoid when taking them. For generations, kindly Marcus Welbys have been giving patients their best bedside practice, telling them about the effects, and side effects, of their latest prescription. Or giving them other, post-clinical advice.
Now, using the Kareo patient education application, and Google Glass, a doctor can simply tap on the frame of his Google Glass EYEGLASSES
“We’ve been innovating with the new Google Glass system, a hands free computer system that has the ability to connect to the Internet and capture audio and video through the lens” said Dr. Tom Guiannuli, chief medical information officer of Kareo. “Studies show the majority of patients do not recall specific instructions given by their provider within minutes of the encounter. This can impact their health, lead to readmissions, and increased costs.”
At the end of the encounter, the physician taps on the Google Glass frame, and images of patients who have registered with the Kareo ELECTRONIC HEALTH RECORDS
These kinds of apps are being customized, based on patient surveys and focus groups, said Dr. Levine. “We have a grant to develop mobile apps specific to stroke survivors and CAREGIVERS
Medical establishment on board
This trend is new for healthcare, which has often been slow to embrace information technology to improve performance. The temptation for the traditional healthcare community is to write off “virtual medicine, integrated ecosystems, consumer transparency, and the like, arguing that healthcare is fundamentally a local business,” said Tom Main, founder of the Oliver Wyman Health Innovating Center. But the impact of these VIRTUAL ASSISTANTS
A reason for this – the medical establishment is on-board from the start. The Institute of Medicine (IOM) of the National Academy of Sciences has identified communication breakdowns as a significant source of medical errors. The healthcare environment is very complex and can be quite difficult for people to navigate.
“When you take that average person and add the stress of illness or injury, attention and comprehension suffer. The final ingredient in the recipe for disaster is time-pressured clinicians. Anything that can help a patient understand what they need to do to care for themselves can be beneficial,” said Christopher Hanifin, chairman of the PHYSICIAN ASSISTANT PROGRAM
However, like all new technologies, especially in medicine, there is a potential downside. “The chief downside to this technology is that it might fail to reach those who could most use it. People with lower socioeconomic status probably need the most help and may well lack access to the electronic resources necessary to draw a benefit from all this technology,” said Hanifin.

Wow. Very useful especially for the doctors. Wonderful.
ReplyDeleteThis make the google glass very worth it.
ReplyDeletethats nice.
ReplyDeleteThe rise of planet technology ! Must be useful nowadays.
ReplyDelete