The future of the health care industry will be shaped by five health IT trends, according to a new report released by Accenture,Healthcare IT News reports (McCann, Healthcare IT News, 6/23).
For the Accenture 2015 Healthcare IT Vision report, researchers surveyed:
- 101 health care executives;
- 601 doctors; and
- 1,000 consumers (Pai, MobiHealthNews, 6/23).
Findings
The five trends identified by the report were:
- “Intelligent Enterprise,” or a focus on data to help improve clinical outcomes;
- “Internet of Me,” or personalized medicine;
- “Outcome Economy,” or a system focused on “delivering results,” in part through increased data accessibility;
- “Platform (R)evolution,” or the increasing prevalence of mobile and cloud platforms that focus on interoperability; and
- “Workforce Reimagined,” or the emergence and implementation of new machine technologies.
The report found that 73% of health executives said they have seen a positive return on investment in personalized medicine technologies (Healthcare IT News, 6/23). Such tools include wearable devices that can track patients’ fitness and vital signs.
Further, the report found that:
- 85% of physicians said wearable devices can help patients better engage with their own health; and
- 76% of patients said that wearable devices have the potential to help them manage or improve their health (MobiHealthNews, 6/23).
Meanwhile, 41% of executives said their data volumes have jumped by 50%, compared with a year ago (Healthcare IT News, 6/23).
In terms of intelligent machine technologies, the report found that:
- 84% of executives expect that the health care industry within the next three years will need to focus on training machines — such as algorithms, intelligent software and learning tools — as much as they focus on training people; and
- 83% of respondents believe that providers will have to manage such machines, as well as employees, due to the increase in clinical data (MobiHealthNews, 6/23).
The report also projected that 66% of health systems in the U.S. will have self-scheduling technologies by 2020 (Healthcare IT News, 6/23).
Kaveh Safavi, global managing director of health care industry at Accenture, in a statement said, “As the digital revolution gains momentum, doctors and clinicians will use machines to augment human labor, personalize care and manage more complex tasks” (MobiHealthNews, 6/23).
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