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Internet of Things (IoT) For Healthcare
Joseph Hobbs, CHCIO, MBA Regional Chief Information Officer - NetApp April 27th, 2016 Twitter: @JOEtheCIO
© 2016 NetApp, Inc. All rights reserved. --- NETAPP CONFIDENTIAL --- 1
Overview
1) Where Healthcare IoT stands
2) Healthcare IoT challenges What’s holding IoT back?
3) What’s next for IoT? Imagine the future
The Journey of IoT in Healthcare
© 2016 NetApp, Inc. All rights reserved. --- NETAPP CONFIDENTIAL --- 2
What is IoT
The Internet of things (IoT) is the network of physical objects that contain embedded technology to communicate and sense or interact with their internal states or the external environment.
Examples in Healthcare Consumer Wearable Nike FuelBand, Apple Watch, FitBit, etc.
Wireless Devices Scales, Glucometer, Blood Pressure Monitor
Traditional Medical Devices Chemotherapy Dispensers, Pumps, etc.
Definition
© 2016 NetApp, Inc. All rights reserved. --- NETAPP CONFIDENTIAL --- 3
Source: Gartner
Where Healthcare IoT Stands
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32% of mobile device owners use fitness apps. Source: MobiHealthNews
58% U.S. adults own a smartphone: • 98% 18-29 yrs. • 97% 30-49 yrs. • 88% 50-64 yrs.
Starts with Our Smartphones
Source: Pew Internet unless otherwise specified
Among the 6-in-10 Americans who say they track their weight, diet or exercise routine, 9% say
they use online or app tools.
Diet & fitness apps used by 55.7 million U.S. adults, up
from 43.9 million in 2012.
90% of U.S. patients with chronic condition would accept mobile app prescription. Source: PMLive
Growth in Wearable Devices & Mobile Apps Is a Positive Correlation Signal
Units (millions)
Wearable Electronics: 200 Million Units Will Ship in 2020.
0
50
100
150
200
250
2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020
Other, clothing,accessories
Bluetoothheadsets
Smart watches
Smartglasses
Fitness andhealth monitoring
End User Spending on Apps and Services Will Grow From $4.5B to $160B.
98%
2%
2014
Wearable DevicesApps & Services
73%
27%
2020
Consumers: Barriers to purchasing IoT devices and services
Source: Accenture, “Igniting Growth in Consumer Technology” Jan 5, 2016
Limited Integration to Providers Systems
What is holding IoT back
Healthcare IoT Challenges
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Risks Accidental
Cyber Crime Hacked Pacemaker
Device Level Security
Less FDA restrictions
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All this Data, now what?
Who owns the data?
How do you manage it? Bring it into the EMR?
Who is liable?
Data accuracy
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Who keeps it and how long?
Cost of storage
Cloud? On Premise?
Providers?
Consumer applications?
How do we share it?
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Imagine the future
What is next for IoT
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Healthcare is EXPEN$IVE
Take action on with the data
Improve Patient Outcomes
Save $$$ Preventative care
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Imagine the future…
Before you even fully wake in the morning, your bed has transmitted information about your sleep quality to your physician. Later in the day, your elderly mother's pill bottle alerts you and her physician's office that she hasn't taken her blood pressure med. Your refrigerator has already informed the grocery delivery service that you're running low on life's essentials of soy milk and wine.
© 2016 NetApp, Inc. All rights reserved. --- NETAPP CONFIDENTIAL --- 15
Source: Hospitals and Health Networks
Analytics
Predictive Analytics
Integration to Patient Portals
IBM Watson Health
Improve Outcomes
Reduce Cost
© 2016 NetApp, Inc. All rights reserved. --- NETAPP CONFIDENTIAL --- 16
Thank you. Questions?
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