A brief tutorial video showing the user how to use your iPad to open a medical academic paper into DropBox.
Rescooped by Lionel Reichardt / le Pharmageek from E-HEALTH - E-SANTE - PHARMAGEEK |
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A brief tutorial video showing the user how to use your iPad to open a medical academic paper into DropBox. No comment yet.
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The market is abuzz about all things mHealth. Press coverage on provider-patient mHealth solutions is ramping up with a recent example being the point-counterpoint piece in Forbes following the pre...
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Les consommateurs se servent de plus en plus de leurs appareils mobiles (smartphones et tablettes) pour accéder à une multitudes de données et d’information. De ce fait, les entreprises doivent s’adapter aux nouvelles tendances et améliorer leur...
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Astute Internet observers know by now that the future of the web is mobile. More and more consumers will access data and information via smartphones, tablets and other portable devices.
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In our always-connected world we have everything at our fingertips, including the tools to make better healthcare decisions. Via Parag Vora, Lionel Reichardt / le Pharmageek
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Information regarding cost, quality, procedures, diseases, medications, and providers is becoming increasingly available to the public via information technology media, including mobile smartphone apps, which are coming to serve as empowering tools to consumers.
Via nrip, Lionel Reichardt / le Pharmageek
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According to the Pew Internet & American Life Project, nearly 90% of U.S. adults own a mobile phone and more than half of these users own a smartphone.
everal innovative HHS public health programs here: National Library of Medicine (NLM) has a gallery of mobile apps and mobile-optimized websites to disseminate health information to the public, including “Health Hotlines” and several emergency response apps. In addition, PubMed Mobile and MedlinePlus Mobile provide the public with access to information on a broad range of topics including wellness and general health news on various mobile platforms. Via Dimitra Kontochristou, Lionel Reichardt / le Pharmageek
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Michael Spitz (@spitzstrategy), SVP, Zemoga, considers possible futures for mobile health and speculates as to what the pharma and healthcare industries may look like a century from now.
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Les nouvelles technologies vont bouleverser les relations entre les patients et les médecins.
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This is an article exploring how issues around drug compliance could manifest in the use of health apps and how pharma companies can learn from this. Read further.. Via Appature Inc., Lionel Reichardt / le Pharmageek
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Le laboratoire Janssen a lancé une application iPhone consacrée à l’hépatite C : C Time. |
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Many doctors frown on consumers' interest in mobile health, says PwC report.
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#mHealth must-see http://ow.ly/br9Fm RT @MattKibbyBBK: Asthma App Analyzes Breath Sounds Using Advanced Algorithms To Detect Wheezing... Via Gilles Jourquin, Lionel Reichardt / le Pharmageek
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Les industriels Nokia et Qualcomm, soutenus par la fondation X-Prize, lancent deux concours pour faire émerger des systèmes de suivi et d'autodiagnostic des personnes en mobilité.
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A presentation given by Santosh Kumar, University of Memphis Co-Sponsored by ISTS, the CS Colloquium, and the Psychiatric Research Center's (PRC) Center for Technology and Behavioral Health (CTBH)
[AS: This runs l-o-n-g at over an hour, and I'll confess to not having watched all of it. However, those bits I did dive into at random seemed interesting. I've asked the speaker if he'd be kind enough to share the deck on SlideShare. I'll replace this link if he does.]
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Most physicians own iPads or other tablet computers, and they are finding creative ways to integrate them into patient interactions and other aspects of medicine....
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We’re kicking off an entire month dedicated toward exploring the mobile health industry, the best tools on the market, and strategies that we are... Via uri goren, Lionel Reichardt / le Pharmageek
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An Ideas Incubator project to establish an open development business model focused on mobile health services: 'Mobile services are primarily about linking – connecting people to information, services, and people who can help.
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Ouest France EntreprisesTout le dossier médical sur un iPadOuest France EntreprisesElle est plus grande et permet désormais d'y glisser un iPad, la tablette tactile d'Apple. Via dbtmobile, AttractiveHealthcare, Lionel Reichardt / le Pharmageek
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UBIFRANCE is bringing a delegation of French companies to the U.S. to enable professionals from both sides of the Atlantic to meet and share their expertise. Via Gilles Jourquin, Lionel Reichardt / le Pharmageek
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Medical device inventor, investor, and electronics engineer Mir Imran once told me “problems don’t care about technology.” As it turns out, many innovators and entrepreneurs tend to be so enamored by technology that they neglect to spend sufficient time understanding the market needs that their products are meant to address.
This tendency is rather widespread in the domain of mobile health (or insert "digital health," "connected health" or any other nomenclature you prefer), which, if you listen to some accounts, is a field set to explode in importance. I agree that the time is ripe for transformation in medicine, which hasn't been revolutionized by electronics nearly as dramatically as many consumer industries. But the pace of change might be disappointing to those who are most enthusiastic about the prospects of a short-term mobile revolution. And not just because of expense of investing in it and the fact that regulation tends to slow down the introduction of new technology...
For a product to find success in the marketplace, not only does it need to be easy enough to use that it is unobtrusive, but the user must be inspired enough to use it to fix their problem.
On a related note, a recent piece by device designer Stuart Karten explains that “technology must come together with meaning to be successful.” Only products that “connect with people’s values and mindsets—their ceremonies, behaviors, rituals, motivations, and preferences” are truly successful, he explains.
Via nrip, dbtmobile, Lionel Reichardt / le Pharmageek
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Les nouvelles technologies, notamment avec les réseaux de patients 2.0, changent tout notre rapport à la santé. Elles offrent aussi des outils très pratiques comme les applications proposées sur les smartphones. Via catherine cerisey, Lionel Reichardt / le Pharmageek |