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Finally, doctors are trusted data stewards for patients — something we’ve appreciated since the advent of HIPAA. Note that ecommerce sites such as Amazon, Target, and Walmart — and three powerhouse channels for retailing digital health devices — all host consumer reviews for devices sold on their sites.
Providers are constantly searching for methods to increase patient engagement and improve the patientexperience. When patients are actively engaging with their providers, they are involved in the necessary communication and collaboration it takes to maintain a healthy lifestyle and improve health outcomes.
The first graphic shown here illustrates the authors’ view on the digital evolution of HaH from delivery of care (migrating from in-person to fully virtual), telecomms (from telephone to embedded HIPAA-compliant video conferencing), and remote monitoring, moving from patient-reported data of vital signs to wearable sensors.
Medical literacy, such as understanding medical instructions following up procedures, lab tests, and inpatient discharges to the home. Financial literacy, especially key to U.S. health citizens’ health engagement given growing financial exposure to health care costs (e.g.,
One of the tipping points called out in this document is the WannaCry ransomware outbreak from May 2017, which occurred due to one protocol embedded in “dozens of unique medicaltechnologies,” the document describes. The link will take you to the Request, and input will be accepted until 31 May 2018.
The heart has been a digital health focus at CES for several years as sensors got added to wristworn activity trackers and mobile apps married to medicaltechnologies that were once only available for use in a doctor’s office or outpatient clinic. Heart health at home.
These capabilities will support predictive analytics, real-time patient monitoring, and personalized care, significantly improving decision-making and patient outcomes. Enhanced compliance with regulations like HIPAA and FHIR standards will prioritize the secure exchange and storage of healthcare data.
This change is occurring as the result of clinical innovations, patient preferences, financial incentives, electronic health records, telemedicine, and an increased focus on improving quality of care and clinical outcomes. Add in that healthcare is a prime target, and all of the factors point to healthcare needing to do more to protect data.
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