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How fast can remote monitoring move?

What the remote medical monitoring industry needs to get past the analysts' hockey stick graphs are standards. Technical standards, payment standards, approval standards. This is no longer rocket science, it's not experimental.
Written by Dana Blankenhorn, Inactive

Remote medical monitoring, the use of sensors and networks to detect changes in patients and deliver alerts to caregivers, has been growing throughout this century. (Picture from Abledata.)

This week's approval of an Alcatel-Lucent TeleHealth Manager by the FDA is just the latest 510(c) approval in a long line.

Not everything is rosy in this business, and not all the fault lies with government. Insurers are reluctant to reimburse, which makes no sense since these systems save enormous amounts of money. BIOTRONIK's remote heart monitors have been approved to replace doctors' visits.

Where Intel (and its new partner GE) can provide a service to the whole industry is by helping to streamline these approvals, from both industry and the FDA.

Electronics are insanely reliable. The links available between devices, base stations, and caregivers, via the Internet, are also improving thanks to Moore's Law. You can even get remote health monitoring through WiFi.

What the industry needs to get past the analysts' hockey stick graphs are standards. Technical standards, payment standards, approval standards. This is no longer rocket science, it's not experimental.

Make it part of the technology mainstream, let remote monitoring benefit from Moore's Law economics, and medicine will be truly transformed, in Internet time.

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