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By Healthcare IT News Staff | 09:40 pm | May 16, 2011
Technical advancement in the remote patient monitoring market is one of the key factors that is expected to contribute to its growth over the next couple of years, according to a new report. The report conducted by TechNavio and released by MarketResearch.com reveals that the global patient monitoring system market will reach $9.3 billion in 2014. The report focuses on United States, EMEA, and APAC.
By Molly Merrill | 03:54 pm | May 16, 2011
As more employees use their personal mobile devices at work, it is vital that healthcare organizations have a "policy to in place to keep their employees productive and their data safe," says one expert.Michael Maloof, chief technology officer for TriGeo Network Security, Inc., a provider of security information and event management solutions based in Post Falls, Idaho, says that in order for HIPAA policies to be maintained, it is critical that organizations' human resources and IT departments work together to educate employees on mobile device policies.
By Healthcare IT News Staff | 03:36 pm | May 16, 2011
Broader access to fast 4G wireless technologies will boost healthcare in rural and developing parts of the world where landline Internet is less developed, according to experts from the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, the world's largest technical professional association.In March, the IEEE-SA Standards Board approved IEEE 802.16m, an advanced 4G wireless standard. Among the improvements promised by increased high-speed wireless, officials say, is an extended reach of high-quality healthcare through telemedicine.
By Healthcare IT News Staff | 01:52 pm | May 16, 2011
Certain specialties, such as psychiatrists and oncologists, are more likely to be using video conferencing with patients, according to a new study from Manhattan Research. Taking the Pulse U.S. v11.0, a study of 2,041 U.S. practicing physicians, focuses on how physicians are using technology in the practice, such as for electronic health records, electronic prescribing and interaction with patients.The study found that seven percent of U.S. physicians use online video conferencing to communicate with their patients.
By Brian Dolan | 11:33 am | May 16, 2011
By Healthcare IT News Staff | 08:31 pm | May 12, 2011
The increase in access to the Internet could be contributing to the prescription drug abuse epidemic this country is facing, according to a new Health Affairs report.The study released Thursday shows that a 10 percent increase in the availability of high-speed Internet service in a state was associated with an approximately 1 percent increase in admissions to a treatment facility center for prescription drug abuse. The number of U.S. households with Internet access increased from 18 percent in 1997 to 61 percent in 2007.
By Molly Merrill | 03:54 pm | May 12, 2011
Consumers are tracking their own health data online, according to a new report by the Pew Research Center's Internet & American Life Project and the California HealthCare Foundation.The report, titled The Social Life of Health Information, 2011 by Susannah Fox, Pew's associate director, is billed as the first time anyone has reported, in a national consumer survey, how consumers are using the Internet for self-tracking of their health. Self-tracking
By Healthcare IT News Staff | 03:16 pm | May 12, 2011
Continua Health Alliance, an international non-profit, open industry organization of 240 healthcare and technology companies, has announced the public release its 2010 Design Guidelines, which Continua executives describe as the pathway for the creation of an end-to-end personal connected healthcare solution.
By Diana Manos | 03:15 pm | May 12, 2011
A new poll shows most people trust health and medical research information provided by traditional news sources over social media and mobile devices.According to a statewide survey, commissioned by Research!America, most Maryland residents trust the health and medical research information provided by traditional media - newspapers (77 percent), television (71 percent), magazines (68 percent), radio (66 percent) - and the Internet (66 percent).
By Chip Means | 12:54 pm | May 12, 2011
There's wonderful information technology in the World of Health IT exhibit hall, said Microsoft's Bill Crounse here in Budapest, but it's what you do with the information that counts.Crounse, senior director of Worldwide Health for Microsoft, provided eHealth Week attendees with a tour of numerous advances in healthcare technology emerging throughout the world, while emphasizing the importance of putting patients in control of healthcare IT.