M-HEALTH By PHARMAGEEK
255.0K views | +0 today
Follow
M-HEALTH  By PHARMAGEEK
M HEALTH...and Mobile marketing - Mobile, Ipad and Apps.. #mhealth #ehealth #healthapps
Your new post is loading...
Your new post is loading...
Rescooped by Lionel Reichardt / le Pharmageek from Digital Pharma news
Scoop.it!

FDA clears Sandoz and Pear’s Opioid Use Disorder app - PMLiVE #hcsmeufr#esante #digitalhealth

FDA clears Sandoz and Pear’s Opioid Use Disorder app - PMLiVE #hcsmeufr#esante #digitalhealth | M-HEALTH  By PHARMAGEEK | Scoop.it

The app incorporates CBT to improve high relapse rates


Via Rémy TESTON
No comment yet.
Rescooped by Lionel Reichardt / le Pharmageek from mHealth- Advances, Knowledge and Patient Engagement
Scoop.it!

How mHealth tech is changing diabetes treatment

How mHealth tech is changing diabetes treatment | M-HEALTH  By PHARMAGEEK | Scoop.it

Today's mobile apps are helping diabetics aggregate blood sugar and nutritional data from multiple platforms and devices and logging data into central portals accessible anywhere, according to Steve Robinson, general manager of the Cloud Platform Services Division for IBM.

The apps and snap-on smartphone monitoring devices are letting physicians integrate biometric data from wearables into patient data and analyze patient data at fast speed, Robinson writes at InformationWeek. The benefits are just as extensive as the functionality being developed, he says

The gains include everything from simplifying records and improving doctor-patient conversations to gaining a holistic view of a diabetic's health. Doctors can "crunch and analyze patient data at rapid speeds to help identify patterns and predict future health and treatment needs," he writes.

"Mobile apps can help diabetes sufferers get ahead of their symptoms and live healthier, more carefree lives," Robinson says. 

eBrief | Advice for Healthcare Organizations Seeking to Centralize Patient Records, Decommission Legacy Systems

Health systems are transforming their foundations and infrastructures to cut costs and improve care. In this eBook, hospital leaders share challenges and tools to make systemwide decisions that can help boost quality care and outcomes. Download today!

Sign up for our FREE newsletter for more news like this sent to your inbox!

Diabetes tools have ranged from providing smartphone coaching that is helping diabetics living in low to modest socioeconomic communities manage their disease and improving their health, to a wearable, automated bionic pancreas for continuous glucose monitor and a software algorithm, according to a study at the New England Journal of Medicine.

In addition, mobile monitoring of diabetic employees can save more than $3,000 a year in healthcare costs, half of the average annual medical insurance cost for workers diagnosed with diabetes. 

Today's tools and cloud-based capabilities are reducing those costs while also driving innovation for disease management, Robinson says.

"Using cloud services, combined with the ease and convenience of mobile, new methods of managing this disease are being brought to patients around the world," he writes.

For more information:
- read the article

Related Articles:
Mobile monitoring tools can cut diabetes management costs in half
Smartphone-powered bionic pancreas outperforms traditional diabetes pump
Smartphone coaching can boost diabetic management, help reduce disease risks
Smartphone app aims for faster, more accurate, body fluid testing
Smartphones may be the next-gen blood test laboratory
Montefiore explores texting for diabetic teens, pre-op care


Via Celine Sportisse, DIRECT MEDICA by Webhelp, dbtmobile, Giuseppe Fattori, eMedToday
No comment yet.
Rescooped by Lionel Reichardt / le Pharmageek from mHealth- Advances, Knowledge and Patient Engagement
Scoop.it!

To deal with chronic disease, patients will need better mobile health apps

To deal with chronic disease, patients will need better mobile health apps | M-HEALTH  By PHARMAGEEK | Scoop.it

Of all the potential calamities facing humanity, the one that few people can argue about is that of the global population that is growing in numbers, age, size and incidence of chronic disease. In Australia, 3.6 million people have diabetes or pre-diabetes. In the US, that number was 29.1 million in 2012, or 9.3% of the population. The number of people with pre-diabetes in 2012 however was a staggering 86 million.

Diabetes is the 6th leading cause of death in Australia and the 7th in the US.

 

http://theconversation.com/to-deal-with-chronic-disease-patients-will-need-better-mobile-health-apps-35283

 


Via Ignacio Fernández Alberti, Celine Sportisse, eMedToday
Decide Consulting's curator insight, January 7, 2015 12:47 PM

Mobile apps encourage healthy behavior. Everyone needs custom preventive and routine care. @decidemobility

Andre Mouton's curator insight, January 8, 2015 3:53 PM

Please look outside of the US for options to consider.

Rescooped by Lionel Reichardt / le Pharmageek from mHealth: Patient Centered Care-Clinical Tools-Targeting Chronic Diseases
Scoop.it!

mHealth: The Doctor's Tech Toolbox

mHealth: The Doctor's Tech Toolbox | M-HEALTH  By PHARMAGEEK | Scoop.it

In 2009, the US under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, allocated  $19 billion to accelerate adoption of health IT systems by doctors and hospitals in order to modernise the health care system, save billions of dollars, reduce medical errors and improve quality. US hospital spending on iIT will hit $4.7b in 2011 and grow to $6.8b by 2014


Via ET Russell
ET Russell's curator insight, November 17, 2014 3:09 PM

[INFOGRAPHIC] providing a snapshot on:

- mobile device preferences by clinicians

- how clinicians are using mobile devices at the point of care

- the top 3 uses that physicians have for mobile based technology in their practice

- mobile apps

- doctors using social media/hospital social media accounts