Will the Internet of Health Things Disrupt Healthcare?

2016; RELX Group (Netherlands); Linguagem: Inglês

10.2139/ssrn.2760447

ISSN

1556-5068

Autores

Nicolas Terry,

Tópico(s)

Persona Design and Applications

Resumo

This essay considers the potential for the Internet of Health Things (IoHT). Initial interest on emerging technologies that could benefit individual and population health has focused on health applications installed on mobile computing platforms and wearable devices. Increasingly, however, attention should extend to a far larger cohort of networked connected devices known as the Internet of Things (IoT), an environment where devices communicate with each other and, potentially, mobile health apps and wearables. The resulting Internet of Health Things promises to do things no conventional health providers have been able to do (or do it faster and cheaper). First, they are always on, providing 24x7 monitoring of the patient or pre-patient. Second, the multiple sensors contained in smartphones or second generation wearables such as the Apple watch are professional-grade. Third, our smartphones and wearables are highly context-aware, with knowledge of place, temperature, surrounding and, increasingly, of other people and things around us. Fourth, they are smart and capable of learning, often leveraging sophisticated, cloud-based analytics. However, the Internet of Health Things is, at least in comparison to conventional healthcare, unregulated or, at best, under-regulated. Three areas of concern are identified and analyzed (1) effectiveness and quality (2) data protection (including pre-patient expectations) and (3) device safety and quality. The essay concludes on a positive note, examining ways in which the IoHT can improve both traditional healthcare and create new, disruptive approaches to technologically-mediated care.

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