Providing market research reports, industry analysis, company profiles and country reports for strategic planning, competitive intelligence, marketing and business research.
Search for Market Research Reports:    

Wireless Based Disease Management

Published by: Wireless Healthcare

Published: Jun. 26, 2007 - 28 Pages


Table of Contents


Overview
1 Introduction - Achieving Global Reach

2 Three Diseases And Psychosomatics

2.1 Managing Diseases

2.1.1 Managing Aids

2.1.2 Managing Diabetes

2.1.3 Managing Epidemics

2.2 Managing Psychosomatics

3 Two Approaches To Deployment

3.1 The Top Down Approach

3.1.1 The Top Down Approach And The Healthcare Organisation

3.1.2 The Top Down Approach And The IT Vendor

3.2 The Bottom Up Approach (‘Google Health’)

4 The Technology

4.1 The Network - Multiple Roles For Wireless

4.2 Intelligence At The Core

4.2.1 Top Down Deployments

4.2.1 Bottom Up Deployments

4.3 Middleware As The Middle Ground

5 The Market

5.1 Market Drivers

5.1.1 Vendor Push

IBM

Yahoo And Google

Oracle And Microsoft

Cerner

The Pharmacuetical Sector

5.1.2 Consumer Pull

Patients

Healthcare Providers

5.2 Market Inhibitors

5.2.1 Privacy

5.2.2 Restrictive Practises

5.2.3 Regulation

5.2.4 Technical Issues

5.2.5 Commercial Issues

6 Implications For Wireless Device Vendors

6.1 Choosing A Development Partner

6.2 Re-orientation

6.3 The ‘Googleisation’ Of Healthcare

6.4 Funding Services

7 Conclusions

8 Vendor Profiles

IBM

Google

Tplus Medical

Voxiva

Microsoft

Cerner

Appendix A - The New eHealth Model

Abstract

Wireless Based Disease Management

In 1854 the physician John Snow showed that cholera was transmitted from person to person via a germ contained in water rather than being contracted by breathing ‘bad air’. Snow collected data on instances of cholera in the Soho area of London. Using this data he drew up a map of the disease, which indicated that the epicentre of the outbreak was a pump on Broad Street from which victims collected drinking water. So began the science of epidemiology.

Today major IT companies are developing applications that are capable of creating complex models of the diseases that pose a threat in the twenty-first century. Some applications are based on genomics and use genetic data to assess the individual’s vulnerability to a particular disease.

Modern communication technology provides a wide range of powerful tools that take no more than a few seconds to carry out the type of analysis that took John Snow several months. However, many modern diseases are global in nature, and an epidemic or disease modelling application used in just one country is of little practical use in monitoring the spread of AIDS or influenza. Similarly, an application based in the offices of a global healthcare organisation will be of little use if individual countries are unwilling to export patient data.

There are alternatives to the centralised model. Health is one of the most popular enquiries on search engines, resulting in computer users around the world providing Google with tacit medical information. While, currently, this information is for the most part unusable, as search engines become more sophisticated and their owners extend their reach into other sectors of the information technology market, global healthcare based search services could provide a platform for epidemiology and disease modelling applications. Such systems could play a role in modelling afflictions that are not related to genetic factors and help manage psychosomatic based diseases.

Regardless of which deployment model prevails, wireless devices will play a key role in the collection of data and the delivery of healthcare information. The wireless device can provide a personalised connection, and it will also be the wireless, rather than wire line, network that eventually provides global reach.

This report examines a range of epidemic and disease monitoring and modelling technologies and identifies key trends in this market. It also considers the relative merits of the centralised ‘top down’ and the distributed ‘bottom up’ deployment models and the opportunities each route to market creates for wireless device and medical software vendors.

Get Full Details About This Report >>
US: 800.298.5699
Int'l: +1.240.747.3093
Buy this Report
Price and Delivery Options

Search Inside Report


 

About MarketResearch.com
MarketResearch.com is an online aggregator selling over 300,000 market research reports, company profiles and country profiles from over 700 research firms. Our reports will provide you with the critical business and competitive intelligence you need for strategic planning and marketing research. Coverage includes the US, UK, Europe, Asia and global markets.

 

© MarketResearch.com 2012