Healthcare is the hottest issue not only in
Washington, D.C. but also in the entire United States. Occupying the politicians is the debate on
the Affordable Care Act or what is commonly dubbed as OBAMACARE.
From
causing the government shutdown earlier to the glitches in the rollout of the
Healthcare insurance program, its importance and role cannot be ignored.
Mobile devices are the hottest gadgets
today. They are the devices of choice by
the majority of the world’s population be they consumers, enterprises, health enthusiasts
and patients, health providers, and policy-makers.
Users
choose mobile and electronic devices for their utility and functional features
as well as the software applications that are available in these devices. For this, our world has been dubbed as the
“Planet of the Apps.”
This interest in Healthcare, Mobile, and Digital
devices and Apps must have been the reason for the two summits being held in
the next two months.
The first is the mHealth Summit on December
8-11, 2013 at the National Harbor, Washington, D.C.; and the second is the
International CES Digital Health Summit to be held on January 7-10, 2014 in Las
Vegas, Nevada.
I
plan to attend both summits as a credentialed member of the Press representing
Asian Journal USA again. Attended by
representatives from more than 150 countries, it would be exciting to meet
people of varied cultures but with similar interests in the Healthcare, Mobile,
and Digital fields.
Mobilization and digitization via online
networks have indeed made it easier for healthcare providers to communicate and
share their expertise and localize global health knowledge as well as
globalizing local health knowledge.
As
I have done in the past, I will be looking for new health products and
technologies that fall under what I call “Little Miracles, Magic, or Mind-Boggling
Technologies.”
The mHealth Summit is noted for being the event
“where Technology, Business, Research, and Policy connect.” It is the largest of its kind. It brings together “leaders in government,
the private sector, industry, academia, providers and not-for-profit
organizations from across the mHealth ecosystems to advance collaboration in
the use of wireless technology to improve health outcomes in the United States
and abroad.”
This year, mHealth Summit is expected to get
participants like me to experience 6 Keynotes; 100 Educational Sessions; 400+
Exhibitors; 5,500+ Attendees and exclusive co-located events such as: MHealth
in the Hospital Symposium; Health 2.0 Symposium; Pharma Roundtable; Games for
Health Workshop; ONC Town Hall Meeting; M2M Now Workshop; Policy Forum; NIH
Training Institute; and WIP Jam.
Because
of my legal background, I am particularly interested in the sessions that deal
with “developing an appropriate legal infrastructure that is essential for all
executives, practitioners and organizations seeking to implement electronic
health records, introduce mobile devices into the enterprise, and comply with
federal health care statutes and regulations.”
The meaning of health law and how legal
principles are applied to the use of mobile devices in health care are subjects
that I would like to explore.
I hope to know
more about the legal framework for managing security and risk in the mobile
device ecosystem; the legal aspects of Telemedicine; the role of Artificial
Intelligence and Robotics in Health Care in the U.S. and abroad; and emerging
legal issues when protected health information is stored in the Cloud.
These are all
subjects in the scheduled sessions I intend to participate in.
The CES Digital Health Summit 2014 in Las Vegas is supposed to be
the conference where “Health and Technology Transform Lives.” A conference plus 4 days of exhibition, the
Summit focuses on the emerging market of consumer-based digital health and
wellness devices, related applications and services.
Like last year and previous ones, the event will expose developers, manufacturers, distributors and service providers to the opportunities, partnerships, business models, distribution channels, and standards of the rapidly evolving industry of digital health technologies.
Like last year and previous ones, the event will expose developers, manufacturers, distributors and service providers to the opportunities, partnerships, business models, distribution channels, and standards of the rapidly evolving industry of digital health technologies.
The topics and the corresponding speakers at the conference are
quite interesting. One session deals
with “Point-of-Care Everywhere”.
Tele-health systems, seamless experiences between devices, meeting
patients and consumers exactly where they are, are the areas of focus in this
session.
Another session
deals with the topic “Loudmouth Patients: Making Noise and Making Change.” The
focus here is about empowering the patient.
The brochure says, “The empowered patient is not a new concept, but now
more than ever, patient and physician influencers are armed to advocate for
better care and to impact decision-making on a broader scale. Join a leading journalist, a social analyst
and two of the loudest mouth patients we know for an explosive conversation, as
they make huge strides in advocating for all of us.” I might attend this one.
The last session is on “The Radical Hospital”. Speakers will be discussing cutting-edge
surgical spider robots, augmented reality guided clinical applications, RFID
biometric-tracked patients, physiological monitoring, artificial intelligence –
just a few of the radical technologies making their way into hospital. We are supposed to hear first-hand how these
innovations are changing the way medicine is practiced and how they are saving
money and saving lives.
It is probably in
this session that I would get some leads as to what health technologies could
qualify as “miracles, magic or mind-boggling.”
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