How Mobile Technologies Fuel TeleHealth Advances
This article appears in the September 2012 issue of HealthLeaders magazine.
Ever since the first experiments with telemedicine, providers have been taking steps to move healthcare closer to where patients live and work. Now, mobile technology—epitomized by the millions of such apps already downloaded to smartphones, but also appearing in nearly unlimited form factors—is accelerating those steps.
Healthcare a Seedbed for Analytics Research
The healthcare industry, which has long trailed other industries in its use of analytics, is a leader in research on natural language processing, artificial intelligence, and genomics, fueling advances in areas such as decision support. >>>
At Boston's Partners HealthCare, a system with 2,700 licensed beds, 45 employees scrutinize these developments at the Center for Connected Health. One early effort to equip cardiac patients with remote monitoring technology resulted in a 50% drop in readmissions, says Joseph Kvedar, MD, founder and director of the center.
"We're all committed to a healthcare delivery model that moves care out of the hospital, out of the office, and directly and continuously into the lives of patients," Kvedar says. "We find that the best technologies to facilitate that vision are monitoring and communications technologies properly applied."
Kvedar says his team sees "two reproducible value propositions over and over again" regarding mHealth. One is improved patient self-care. "That to me is the most exciting one, that we can arm patients with data about themselves in context, and they manage it not dissimilar to the way a baseball manager manages a lineup of batting averages. They can see what they're hitting and if they need to improve something. They can do that and watch their numbers change. It's very, very powerful."
- Healthcare Leaders Seek Strategic Sweet Spot
- 3 Reasons Wellness Programs Fail
- CMS Issues Health Insurance Exchange Proposed Rules
- Patients Shoulder Nearly 25% of Medical Bills
- ACOs Widespread, Yet Challenged
- MGMA: Physician Compensation Increasingly Based on Quality Measures
- HFMA: Patient Financial Interaction Guidelines Sharpened
- Data Collaborative Taps Predictive Analytics to Coordinate Care
- HFMA: Revenue Cycle, Reimbursements Share the Spotlight
- Physician Pay Will Soon Depend on Outcomes

Comments are moderated. Please be patient.