What are your biggest worries and fears about mobile healthcare?
At present, mobile medical development is still very early, but this area is extremely hot, both in China and the United States. For this initial market, we have a lot of confusion, but few people are willing to talk openly, because the probability of saying something wrong is too high. Michelle Snyder is senior vice president and chief marketing officer at Welltok. She has recently worked as a resident executive at venture capital firm InterWest Partners, investing in digital healthcare companies and serving as a consultant to the investment company's portfolio companies. She is also one of the early executives of Epocrates, where she worked for more than a decade. In the interview below, she tried to answer some of the questions that most of us are very confused. After reading this article, you can also ask yourself, “What is my biggest worry and fear for mobile medicine ?†Q: What is the most popular and accepted mobile medical trend in the next few years? A: Personalized medicine. I have always thought that the term “population health management†is misused – the population is made up of many individuals, so before you have the opportunity to influence the health of the “populationâ€, you need to understand how to influence the actions of each individual at the individual level. behavior. Now we can influence the individual's healthy behavior through technology. Although we are still arguing more about the current situation: whether we should continue to change step by step, or suddenly change suddenly, but we can use technology to better understand individuals. Technology allows us to understand individual health risks, motivations, acceptability, and choice preferences. This will help the mobile healthcare industry grow faster and move toward a future that enhances patient engagement, changes patient behavior, and optimizes treatment outcomes. Q: In the next five years, which mobile medical technology do you think will be popularized? why? A: I really believe that in the next few years, we will develop a technology (smartphone) that has been popularized in the medical and health industry to a new level. Smartphones are an indispensable tool in our lives, and we will continue to increase the opportunities and occasions of using it in the next few years, and its popularity among everyone (patients, healthcare consumers and customers) will Stronger. Q: What do you think is the top technology application in the next few years? A: We are still in the early stages of the cognitive computing revolution. But I think learning technologies like IBM's Watson system will become smarter in the future and will be able to learn more about consumers. This type of technology has tremendous implications and implications for the healthcare industry. The perception of consumers and patients in the healthcare industry has long been established, and this cognitive perspective is based on outdated information such as claims data and data encountered in the clinic. The healthcare industry should begin to leverage consumer data that is already out of the system and combine it with evolving cognitive computing technologies. The sooner we start doing this, the more successful we will be in attracting individual participation. Q: What are the mobile medical tools or trends that may disappear or fail? A: I don't think that independent fitness tracking devices will fail completely at once, but they have one drawback: they need end users to remember to constantly recharge, wear or synchronize data. In the future, we will embed sensors into all kinds of tools, technologies and apparel that are already common in everyday life, so independent fitness tracking devices will become less and less important. Q: In this field, which trends are the most successful and successful? A: Ironically, I think that the independent fitness tracking device that will “disappear†in the future is also one of the areas that I am most surprised. Living in a place like Silicon Valley, you can easily fall into an illusion - everyone wants to understand their data and how they will help them improve their health. I was surprised to see that companies like Fitbit have entered the mass market. When I went to Wisconsin to visit my mother, I was shocked: she actually wore the Fitbit bracelet and told me that she had more steps than the neighbors. Biotechnology,Tebuthiuron,Trifloxystrobin,Flufenacet,Amicarbazone,Prothioconazole,Sulfentrazone Changzhou Satidi Import and Export Co., Ltd. , https://www.guanjiejts.com