1 mHealth will begin to supersede eHealth
2 the Personal mHR will begin to replace eHR
3 the Health Web Bubble won’t happen
4 OLPC interest will shift to OMPC (One Mobile Per Child).
5 SmartHome and Body Area Network initiatives will disappoint and focus will shift to mHome and Pervasive mTechnologies.
6 A scientific paper will prove a mFitness application can offer greater Health benefits than regular gym use.
7 Mobile Network Operators will start promoting Healthcare uses for Smartphones
8 A 3G Video Calling service will be launched to serve patients in need of Medical Emergency Assistance.
9 mHealth will drive the next phase of hardware convergence
Slide Text in Full...
mHealth Predictions 2009
David Doherty, Business Development, 3G Doctor
1 mHealth will begin to supersede eHealth
eHealth is a term used to cover a wide plethora of digitalization of health. However the vast majority of eHealth initiatives to date have involved basic administration tasks eg. converting paper written records and communications into digital communications. Whilst there is no doubt these conversions of our antique health information systems will continue to deliver enormous cost savings (as much as $30 Billion annually in the U.S. healthcare system) in 2009 this will become seen to be expected as efficient business practice and not eHealth.
When a 2008 Kings Fund Report reveals that unhealthy behavior is costing the UK’s NHS £6 Billion a year it’s time to identify what digital technologies can and can’t do to drive health benefits and begin to target patients who can benefit. The pervasive ownership levels and the power of mobiles to engage patients will propel the growth of connected healthcare faster than any economic or policy decisions, and whilst Chronic Care makes up the majority of healthcare spend it may not be the safest area in which to deploy transformative technologies or to make healthcare cost savings.
In 2009 the medical industry will begin to realize that patients can benefiting from mHealth in ways not possible with eHealth because;
> Mobiles can offer unrivaled levels of ownership, accessibility and secure identity management.
> the type of Healthcare problems that can benefit most from digital intervention are those that require brief engagement, are unplanned, may take place at anytime or anywhere, are long term and can benefit from persuasion & motivation. Only a mobile device has the potential to serve these needs with the necessary privacy, discretion and personalization.
> Because mHealth doesn’t have the confines of episodical event based interaction it can throw aside legacy healthcare applications from the desktop era and deliver magic through use of Smartphone technologies such as Video, 24/7 Feedback, games & applications, Bluetooth, NFC, QR codes, GPS etc.
2 the Personal mHR will begin to replace eHR
With >27% of US adults thinking about creating a Health Record the opportunity for personal Mobile Health Records to take a small slice of this will be the start of something big, particularly now that Nokia has become the worlds largest computer manufacturer.
The take up will languish until the healthcare industry becomes aware that a mHR is not just an eHR contained on a small and convenient mobile phone but an eHR that has enhanced features that include:
> Ownership – enabling patients to be in charge of their own care which also leads to more active role management and maintenance. A one stop shop through which they can create, manage and update (automatically in some instances) and retrievable even in the event of loss/theft.
> Privacy in the event of loss (as it can be remotely stored and retrieved only via secure processes).
> always carried (fundamental to digital identity management best practice)
> Personalization – and engagement
> as the only platform that can empower efficient health monitoring
> as the only platform tha
2. mHealth will begin to supersede eHealth
eHealth is a term used to cover a wide plethora of digitalization of health. However the vast majority of eHealth
initiatives to date have involved basic administration tasks eg. converting paper written records and communications
into digital communications. Whilst there is no doubt these conversions of our antique health information systems
will continue to deliver enormous cost savings (as much as $30 Billion annually in the U.S. healthcare system1) in
2009 this will become seen to be expected as efficient business practice and not eHealth.
When a 2008 Kings Fund Report2 reveals that unhealthy behavior is costing the UK’s NHS £6 Billion a year it’s time to
identify what digital technologies can and can’t do to drive health benefits and begin to target patients who can
benefit. The pervasive ownership levels3 and the power of mobiles to engage patients4 will propel the growth of
connected healthcare faster than any economic or policy decisions, and whilst Chronic Care makes up the majority
of healthcare spend5 it may not be the safest area in which to deploy transformative technologies or to make
healthcare cost savings.
In 2009 the medical industry will begin to realize that patients can benefiting from mHealth in ways not possible with
eHealth because;
> Mobiles can offer unrivaled levels of ownership, accessibility and secure identity management.
> the type of Healthcare problems that can benefit most from digital intervention are those that require brief
engagement, are unplanned, may take place at anytime or anywhere, are long term and can benefit from persuasion
& motivation. Only a mobile device has the potential to serve these needs with the necessary privacy, discretion and
personalization.
> Because mHealth doesn’t have the confines of episodical event based interaction it can throw aside legacy
healthcare applications from the desktop era and deliver magic through use of Smartphone technologies such as
Video, 24/7 Feedback, games & applications, Bluetooth, NFC, QR codes, GPS etc.
1) ushealthcareindex.com/howitworks.php 2) kingsfund.org.uk/publications 3) themda.org/
4) 3gdoctor.wordpress.com/2008/12/18/mhealth-the-only-way-of-garunteeing-reachability/
5) There are 860 million chronic disease patients and Chronic care = 75-85% of healthcare spending (WHO; McKinsey)
3. the Personal mHR will begin to replace eHR
With X% of US adults thinking about creating a Health Record the opportunity for personal Mobile Health Records to
take a small slice of this will be the start of something big, particularly now that Nokia has become the worlds
largest computer manufacturer1.
The take up will languish until the healthcare industry becomes aware that a mHR is not just an eHR contained on
a small and convenient mobile phone but an eHR that has enhanced features that include:
> Ownership – enabling patients to be in charge of their own care which also leads to more active role management
and maintenance. A one stop shop through which they can create, manage and update (automatically in some
instances) and retrievable even in the event of loss/theft.
> Privacy in the event of loss (as it can be remotely stored and retrieved only via secure processes).
> always carried (fundamental to digital identity management best practice)
> Personalization – and engagement
> as the only platform that can empower efficient health monitoring
> as the only platform that can include community as an innate ability.
> micro payment which facilitates patient friendly non-advertiser funded business models
> Mobilizing patient access control via accurate location identifiable and digital identities and authorities
> Reduction of the age/economic access barriers that have hampered eHealth initiatives as a result of the
requirement for PC/Internet access
> The unshared personal nature of the mobile meets the needs of the user-centric healthcare model.
1) communities-dominate.blogs.com/brands/2008/12/so-nokia-is-wor.html
4. the Health Web Bubble won’t happen
Unlike bookstores or videostores most of the work done in the Healthcare industry can’t be done through a content-
specific site on the internet... in 2009 this will be obvious and startups will stop trying to be the Amazon or YouTube
of Healthcare.
Hyperbolic overnight success won’t happen in 2009 as consumers are too well connected to fall for the hype of
unproven healthcare ideas that don’t have a clear and sustainable business model. Marketing hype will not motivate
patients to share their private information and nor will it address the complex pain points they face, as a result it
will be seen for what it is – a tactic used to confuse and distract the listener from questioning the viability of their
decision to entrust their health with an unknown. Instead of setting expectations too high and using buzzword
crutches – Healthcare innovators will need to do the hard work of proving they can help patients.
The need for Health Information will continue to grow and Medical Search Engines will continue to prosper if they
can understand the need for privacy and combine Health Record information to personalize the results. In 2009 the
vast majority of patients will continue to begin Health information searches at Google.
Adoption of Electronic Health Records will continue to flounder until they are patient owned, non-proprietary, easy
to use and access. The step change won’t happen until they become more than an information-only experience and
begin to bundle information with a connection to care experience1 that is tangible and can be understood and
appreciated by patients.
Hyping internet plays may have worked but this can’t be done in Healthcare where behind the marketing hype what
we really need are more gradual evolutions of existing ideas and technologies, organic traffic and recommendation.
1) slideshare.net/3GDR/ehealth-2008-3g-doctor-connecting-care-and-ehealth-records-presentation/
5. OLPC interest will shift to OMPC (One Mobile Per Child).
Just as 2008 saw Nokia become the worlds largest computer maker and the Apple 3G iPhone brought smartphones to
under $200, 2009 will see wider appreciation of the computing & educational benefits of mobile and this will start to
shift the interest in the very successful OLPC into wider global appreciation of the much more achievable potential
for One Mobile Per Child to bridge the digital divide.
In retrospect this won’t seem surprising since much of the initial growth of the PC industry was as a result of the
parallel development of the video gaming console. The OMPC project will be competitively driven by entrepreneurs
and will not only benefit from bundling games but also digital communities, communication and mCommerce.
Oxfam used to use a catchy slogan, give a man a fish he will eat for a day, teach a man to fish he will eat forever.
Giving a child a laptop is like giving a child a fishing boat. There is no doubting the usefulness of a fishing boat, but it
needs more than 1 child to operate and has a resale value, giving a child a mobile is like giving them a fishing rod
because it puts them in the driving seat for their own destiny.
Yes there will no doubt be downsides to small screens and keypads but the new digital migrants that mobiles can
reach will thrive by throwing aside the confines of PC legacy applications and seizing transformative mobile
opportunities.
laptop.org
6. SmartHome and Body Area Network initiatives will disappoint
and focus will shift to mHome and Pervasive mTechnologies.
2009 will be another year when the reality of the talking/computing appliances and homes won’t materialise.
Despite the continued hype and enthusiasm of Industry statements such as “Your Robot Will See You Now”1 and the
proof from providers2. But the tide will turn as the worlds largest maker of computers (Nokia3) launches the first
commercial mHome offering4 and the lower costs, tech neutrality, economies of scale and personalisation potential
that is possible by twinning with upgradeable mobile phone based technologies will future proof ongoing efforts
towards mHomes rather than Smarthomes.
Despite this demand for mHomes will remain restricted to small scale and pilots due to economic pressures and
replacement cycles and mainstream adoption will have to wait until these can prove mass market end user benefits –
which will probably only be achievable for economic/environment, safety (smoke detection etc) or mHealth
functionality.
For 2009 “Body Area Networks”5 will continue to not
happen for a reason. Most of these still represent the legacy
way of doing things: “the job we have is to measure something
and record it”. The ability for Mobiles to support continual
always on sensory monitoring and the computing to process
Biometric data to drive feedback and engagement will lead
to new insights. mHealth technologies won’t go mass market
until designers build specific mobile solutions where the
technology is low cost, invisible and automated.
1) Intels Digital Home Group at CES 2) aberdeenshire.gov.uk/news/release.asp?newsID=981
3) communities-dominate.blogs.com/brands/2008/12/so-nokia-is-wor.html
4) smarthomepartnering.com 5) en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Body_area_network
7. A scientific paper will prove a mFitness application can offer
greater Health benefits than regular gym use.
A scientific paper will be published that will prove a mFitness application involving mobile persuasion and
motivation can exceed the physical health benefits of gym membership. This will open the flood gates for mFitness
applications that produce smarter exercising options, more flexibility and better feedback by integrating smartphone
sensing technologies like GPS and accelerometers1.
Early examples of commercial success in this field can be seen
with Addidas/Samsung’ MiCoach2 and Apple/Nike’ Nike+3, and
next generations will build on the Fitness Gaming phenomenon
that has risen from the success of Nintendo’ Wii4 through the
introduction of community and competitive aspects. A simple
example could be a Wii fitness game that gives coded scores
which can be submitted (via SMS) to a community site.
mFitness gaming will be able to address unmet youth fitness
targets – the levels of obesity are continuing to rise as academic
pressures are making PE mandates harder to meet, and this is
largely underserved by the limitations of conventional gyms
(eg. need for accompaniment by an adult or inconvenient
opening hours).
A motivational mFitness application can drive better fitness
levels by helping persuade participants in a discrete and highly
personalised way to reach their self selected nutritional and
fitness targets and goals.
1) news.cnet.com/Motion-sensing-comes-to-mobile-phones/2100-1039_3-6169697.html
2) micoach.com 3) nike.com/nikeplus 4) nintendo.com/wii
8. Mobile Network Operators will start promoting Healthcare
uses for Smartphones
The success of Apple’s App Store in 2008 with over 5,000 applications and 200 million downloads in the first 100 days
has proven that the mass market is interested in doing things with their mobile asides from voice calling and texting
once the user experience is improved, the discovery challenge is met (through open access and unlimited data) and
the mobile operators stop forcing customers towards their own proprietary services.
Several Mobile Operators are set to launch mHealth
initiatives in 2009 including LifeComm1, Orange Health2
and Vodafone/t+3. Whilst these will push the boundaries
of what is possible none will scale as quickly as open
health applications that can run on multiple devices
such as social gaming (eg. Mental game Sukodu) or
mfitness applications that get around the need for
patients to use the Mobile Internet Browser (a legacy
application from the PC days).
By the end of 2009 Health uses for Smartphones will have
proven to be key drivers for Smartphone adoption and use,
and all 3G operators will have begun to promote them in
a bid to chase the profits that can be generated from
increased use of Smartphones (the most profitable mobile
user group4)
»
Nokia Wellness Diary
1) qualcomm.com/innovation/stories/lifecomm.html
^ Brain Games
2) slideshare.net/3GDR/orange-health-strategy-presentation
< Secure Health Records
3) 3gdoctor.wordpress.com/2008/12/18/vodafone-invests-in-mhealth-firm/
4) dw2-0.com/2008/09/beyond-smartphones.html
9. A 3G Video Calling service will be launched to serve patients
in need of Medical Emergency Assistance.
A 3G Mobile Video service offering live 2-way connection
with an informed Health professional will transform
consumer appreciation of the benefits of 3G Video
Calling technology.
The benefits of 3G Video Calling for emergency medical
advice will include:
1) More effective and informed advice
2) New opportunities for continuity of care
3) New training opportunities
4) Better deployment of emergency response resources
10. mHealth will drive the next phase of hardware convergence
Convergence to the mobile has already happened with Smartphones now featuring Calculator, Calendar, Camera,
Clock, Diary, Email, Games Console, GPS, Gyroscope, IM, Office, Pager, Phonebook, PTT, Radio, RSS Feeds,
Stopwatch, Thermometer, Timer, TV, Video and Web browser.
In 2009 this will continue with Control of our SmartHomes, Google Maps, mBanking, Mobile Communities, mPayment
authorisation, mTicketing, mWallet, SatNav and VOIP.
mHealth technologies/solutions will provide substantial &sustainable mobile ARPU increases and in 2009 will become
appreciated as the first convergent technology that will compel consumers to pay significantly more for advanced 3G
Smartphones.
Patient using a Healthphone to perform a diagnostic heart test Low power wireless medication reminder application