Remove 2019 Remove Interoperability Remove mHealth Remove Survey
article thumbnail

Focus on Technology for Older Adults Sharpens in 2019

Aging in Place Technology Watch

2019 Technology Market Overview is online this week. Here are four updated premises from the 2019 Market Overview of Technology for Older Adults : 1. Caregiving demands of an aging population drive policy change in 2019. Tech adoption among the oldest has not kept pace with technology improvements.

mHealth 108
article thumbnail

Consumers’ Embrace of Digital Health Tech Stalls, and Privacy Concerns Prevail – Accenture’s 2020 Research

Health Populi

Yet with that bullish supply side of digital health, there was a marked decline in peoples’ use of them in the past two years, found by Accenture in their latest health consumer survey, Digital is Transforming Health, So Why is Consumer Adoption Stalling? Use of wearable tech nearly halved, from 33% to 18%, between 2018 and 2020.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Workforce development: Your organization is only as strong as its people

Healthcare IT News - Telehealth

by May 10, 2019. by MobiHealthNews Staff April 08, 2019. Interoperability: Health IT's hardest problem is (finally) at an inflection point. by March 25, 2019. Interoperability: Health IT's hardest problem is (finally) at an inflection point. by March 25, 2019. by March 08, 2019. by March 21, 2019.

Nursing 65
article thumbnail

Why telemedicine and remote patient monitoring demand will skyrocket in 2019

Redox

According to Deloitte’s 2018 Survey of US Physicians , only 23% of patients have had video visits and just 14% of physicians have video visit capability. Is 2019 the year we see telemedicine take the leap? Mobile health (mHealth) : health care and public health information provided through mobile devices. Learn more.

article thumbnail

Review of Mobile Devices and Health by Ida Sim in the NEJM

mHealth Insight

who is a Primary Care Physician, Professor at UCSF & coFounder at Open mHealth (follow her on Twitter @IdaSim ). mHealth Insights. 40 In one survey, more than half of users of activity trackers stopped using their device, and a third did so in the first 6 months. Authored by Ida Sim, M.D., More than 40% of U.S.