mhealth technologies that are working and obstacles to innovation by jim bloedau

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Information Advantage Group, San Francisco GMIC San Francisco 2013 Derek Wong, Ph.D., Associate, Burrill & Company Kabir Kasargod, Director, Business Development at Qualcomm Life Deleys Brandman, MD, MPH, Texas A&M Innovation Center Michael Blum MD, CMIO and Associate Vice Chancellor for Informatics Center for Digital Health Innovation, University of California Medical Center, San Francisco Session 3 Technologies that are working today & obstacles to innovation Integration, engagement, and actionable information The upcoming decade of redesign: what are the unmet needs and what is needed from mHealth to design healthcare for the coming decade

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Presented as general trends at GMIC Mobility conference October 2013

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Page 1: mHealth Technologies that are Working and Obstacles to Innovation by Jim Bloedau

Information Advantage Group, San Francisco GMIC San Francisco 2013

Derek Wong, Ph.D., Associate, Burrill & Company

Kabir Kasargod, Director, Business Development at Qualcomm Life

Deleys Brandman, MD, MPH, Texas A&M Innovation Center

Michael Blum MD, CMIO and Associate Vice Chancellor for Informatics Center for Digital Health Innovation, University of California Medical Center, San Francisco

Moderator: Jim Bloedau, Information Advantage Group, San Francisco

Session 3•Technologies that are working today & obstacles to innovation

•Integration, engagement, and actionable information

•The upcoming decade of redesign: what are the unmet needs and what is needed from mHealth to design healthcare for the coming decade

Page 2: mHealth Technologies that are Working and Obstacles to Innovation by Jim Bloedau

Information Advantage Group, San Francisco GMIC San Francisco 2013

There’s A Lot To Know

Clinician Policy

Reimbursement

Economic Return

Technology

Workflow

Proof

Payer Minimize Risk

Competitiveness

Economic Return

Networks

PatientEngagement

Education

Sensor Technology

Personalization

Visibility

Collaboration

Virtual Care

Participatory

PCMH

MU

ACOHIE

PPS

HIX

Health Navigator

HRA

MLR

HIPPA HIO

PSO

BAA

Quantified Self

NFC

LTE

BYOD

BYOID

EHR

DIY

Page 3: mHealth Technologies that are Working and Obstacles to Innovation by Jim Bloedau

Information Advantage Group, San Francisco GMIC San Francisco 2013

Enterprise Intensive Electronic Interchange

Organization

Page 4: mHealth Technologies that are Working and Obstacles to Innovation by Jim Bloedau

Information Advantage Group, San Francisco GMIC San Francisco 2013

E I - E I - O

Page 5: mHealth Technologies that are Working and Obstacles to Innovation by Jim Bloedau

Information Advantage Group, San Francisco GMIC San Francisco 2013

Page 6: mHealth Technologies that are Working and Obstacles to Innovation by Jim Bloedau

Information Advantage Group, San Francisco GMIC San Francisco 2013

Page 7: mHealth Technologies that are Working and Obstacles to Innovation by Jim Bloedau

Information Advantage Group, San Francisco GMIC San Francisco 2013

Page 8: mHealth Technologies that are Working and Obstacles to Innovation by Jim Bloedau

Information Advantage Group, San Francisco GMIC San Francisco 2013

1% consumes 21% of healthcare costs.

5% of patients accounted for 50 percent of all health-care expenditures.

By contrast the bottom 50% of patients accounted for just 2.8% of spending.

Source: Federal Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) 2012

One Percenters

Page 9: mHealth Technologies that are Working and Obstacles to Innovation by Jim Bloedau

Information Advantage Group, San Francisco GMIC San Francisco 2013

Chronic Disease and Care Will Escalate

Page 10: mHealth Technologies that are Working and Obstacles to Innovation by Jim Bloedau

Information Advantage Group, San Francisco GMIC San Francisco 2013

Slide: Courtesy of Rick Beberman, source: 2011 Medicare Trustees Report

Post acute care spending has been shifting to transitional care and

home.

Page 11: mHealth Technologies that are Working and Obstacles to Innovation by Jim Bloedau

Information Advantage Group, San Francisco GMIC San Francisco 2013

Family members provide the vast majority of support for people over age 80 in the United States

Currently: 7 potential family caregivers available for each frail elderly person.

By 2030: 4 caregivers per frail elderly person

By 2050: 3 per frail elder by 2050

Source(The Aging of the Baby Boom and the Growing Care Gap: A Look at Future Declines in the Availability of Family Caregivers, AARP, August 2013)

Shortage of Family Caregivers

Page 12: mHealth Technologies that are Working and Obstacles to Innovation by Jim Bloedau

Information Advantage Group, San Francisco GMIC San Francisco 2013

Providers As Developers

Page 13: mHealth Technologies that are Working and Obstacles to Innovation by Jim Bloedau

Information Advantage Group, San Francisco GMIC San Francisco 2013

FDA Approved Apps Growth

Page 14: mHealth Technologies that are Working and Obstacles to Innovation by Jim Bloedau

Information Advantage Group, San Francisco GMIC San Francisco 2013

Lab On A Chip

Multi-Sensor

Ingestables

Optical -SensingMicrofluidics

Printables

Page 15: mHealth Technologies that are Working and Obstacles to Innovation by Jim Bloedau

Information Advantage Group, San Francisco GMIC San Francisco 2013

“Zero Cost Diagnostics”

Page 16: mHealth Technologies that are Working and Obstacles to Innovation by Jim Bloedau

Information Advantage Group, San Francisco GMIC San Francisco 2013

Six Billion Cell Phones

Page 17: mHealth Technologies that are Working and Obstacles to Innovation by Jim Bloedau

Information Advantage Group, San Francisco GMIC San Francisco 2013

• 6X growth in mHealth apps by 2018 as there are today – 15 up to 96 million users (45% CAGR).

• 5% to 9% CAGR for consumer medical devices industry revenue reaching $10.6 billion by 2017.

Sources: Juniper Research and Consumer Medical Devices Production Yearbook - 2013, IHS, both September 2013

Growth and Promise of mHealth