Doctors prefer patients to use mobile medical wearables
In the past year, the three giants in the technology field have announced their respective health care efforts: Google has established a health tracking application development platform GoogleFit, Apple released a new mobile application platform HealthKit, and Samsung launched a multi-platform Interactive infrastructure project SAMI. These technology products store human health and biometric data collected by wearable devices into the cloud, while also supporting the sharing of these health data on various devices, APP applications and analysis machines. It is reasonable to say that the benefits of wearable mobile medical devices are obvious. They can monitor high-risk groups such as people with diabetes, and can reduce the burden on doctors through high-tech means, such as low-tech work such as rounds and data entry. At the same time, the US Affordable Care Act (ACA) is also trying to increase millions of people into existing health care systems. Wearables will be a powerful tool to monitor and access disease information before new patients come to see you. . As VentureBeat reports, if the health care system makes full use of this data, doctors can keep in touch with patients, whether they are healthy or sick, not just when they are sick. Despite these good ideas, mobile medical devices have not really been implemented on health care issues until now. For the most part, the use of mobile medical wearable devices is currently limited to wealthy and well-educated people. Although the current technical level is progressing rapidly, and patients' voices for mobile medical care are rising all the time, for the most important subjects, doctors and hospitals, they cannot fully believe that mobile medical care can bring them real. benefit. For doctors, they don't want to spend extra money on an unapproved medical system. They are not only concerned about the accuracy of the data collected by the device, but also worry about data sharing applications, privacy protection and other issues. The situation of each patient is different, and the equipment of major hospitals is difficult to unify, which makes it difficult to guarantee the standardization and accuracy of the collected data. In addition, doctors also reject information sharing. A high-level doctor needs a long period of professional study and supplemented with years of clinical experience. Once the information is shared, the invaluable wealth accumulated by the individual will be Become a thing that everyone can get, and wealth will depreciate. In addition, the obstacle faced by doctors is that there is not enough time and energy to analyze and sort out the health data collected by wearable devices. The doctor may be willing to advise his patients to use wearable devices, exercise more effectively, and even encourage patients to stick to exercise and develop exercise habits, but doctors are reluctant to continuously receive patient health data. Shenzhen BIO Technology Co.,Ltd. , https://www.huifantech.com