Health Care Wearables Essay

825 Words2 Pages

Approximately one half of all adults in the U.S. has been diagnosis with one or more chronic diseases, which account for seven of 10 deaths and 86% of health-care costs. Preventing and treating such ailments requires time that doctors don’t have in brief office visits, and a degree of daily self-management that many patients have been unable to handle. Often they become overwhelmed by the demands of the required daily regiments, slip back into poor health habits, fail to take their medications correctly—and end up in the emergency room. While there has been something of a national obsession with health apps like fitness trackers, most are aimed at exercise and lifestyle buffs and aren’t designed to link patients to health-care providers. Generally …show more content…

With the popularity of consumer devices wearables is the next frontier for healthcare. Nearly all wearables currently on the market, incorporate a health application and many are undergoing an exciting redesign to enhance the patient experience. It could be argued that recent technological advances in wireless communications and wireless sensor networks, “the growth of the Internet of Things (IoT) pretty much ensure that a viable wearable, mobile health ecosystem is a question of when rather than …show more content…

A myriad of technology startups are pitching disease-management devices to health-care providers. That, in turn, has spurred the health-care industry to study which technologies are best and goes well beyond the current mixture of distant monitoring, conduct modification personalized intervention, directly assisting doctors and providing ubiquitous personalized services to patients. A review of select literature notes that pervasive computing are increasingly influencing health care and medicine. Carsten Orwat, Andreas Graefe and Timm Faulwasser in a quantitative and qualitative (1) analyses categorized present prototypes, case studies and pilot studies, clinical trials as evolving concepts and recent implementations with organizational, personnel privacy, security and financial issues. The study continues to say there is a need for further research on the deployment of pervasive computing systems as these, including clinical studies, economic and social analyses, user studies,

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