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Ariella
Ariella
5/16/2016 11:05:27 AM
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telemedicine
This corresponds to what I found here:

By 2012, Verizon Chief Executive Officer  Lowell McAdam said his company was "focused on enabling the transformation" of the health-care industry, backed up by the $10 billion the company spent over the past decade on fiber-optic networks, data centers and network security. But the health-care bet has yet to pan out.

"The carriers haven't done a good job of moving into the hospital setting and investing the time and money to live in the footsteps of the providers," said Lee Schwamm, medical director of telehealth at Massachusetts General Hospital. "It's always been a side business to them."

Both AT&T and Verizon have succeeded in building businesses handling data connections and electronic records for hospitals, but for the most part U.S. wireless carriers remain on the health care sidelines. 

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clrmoney
clrmoney
5/16/2016 2:55:56 PM
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Platinum
Health check
Maybe they should check their apps or troubleshoot the problem for telemeding so that it can function properly etc.

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afwriter
afwriter
5/16/2016 5:38:15 PM
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Security
I think that above all else they need to worried about security and patient confidentiality. 

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JohnBarnes
JohnBarnes
5/17/2016 7:26:43 AM
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Platinum
Too much capital kept too far down the pyramid
As long as everyone else is proposing their favorite concern: the US private health care services sector tends to invest out at the ends of the supply network rather than in the central infrastructure, a natural consequence of having many small competitors setting prices with a market rather than a large single buyer as they have in other developed countries. Telemedicine requires a backbone infrastructure that nobody has much incentive to build.  So your local doctor has a great set of toys that s/he somewhat underuses, but there's no big system to hook them into, because the investment money is staying in that local practice rather than funneling upward to the central system.

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Ariella
Ariella
5/17/2016 10:51:55 AM
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Re: Too much capital kept too far down the pyramid
@JohnBarnes With all the talk we hear about EHR, you'd expect that your doctor can just get yoru entire health history from his tablet. But that is not the case. I once asked my kid's pediatrician about it. She said that each office uses its own system, and they don't talk to each other. That's why when I had to get an X-ray done, I had to carry the disc over to the office to have them view it. We even had to do this with a surgical practice that was affiliated with the hospital at which the X-ray image was taken. 

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vnewman
vnewman
5/17/2016 1:06:15 PM
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Platinum
Re: Too much capital kept too far down the pyramid
@Ariella - I think it's getting better than it used to be, but it has a long way to go.  Teaching hospitals affliated with universities have made greater inroads to centralizing patient data - at least within their own sphere.  But still amazing in such a connected world, this industry remains so vastly disconnected.

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Ariella
Ariella
5/17/2016 1:43:25 PM
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Re: Too much capital kept too far down the pyramid
<  But still amazing in such a connected world, this industry remains so vastly disconnected.> @vnewman exactly so. There's a lot of potential in connection, but much of it has not yet been attained.

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DHagar
DHagar
5/17/2016 4:28:16 PM
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Platinum
Re: Too much capital kept too far down the pyramid
@vnewman - "I think it's getting better than it used to be, but it has a long way to go.  Teaching hospitals affliated with universities have made greater inroads to centralizing patient data - at least within their own sphere." Agreed - there has been tremendous progress within the health industry with their digitization of health records.

The "disconnected" frontier remains the patient and the consumers.  This is a big universe of opportunity.  I believe healthcare is waking up to it, but will have a learning curve; and to carriers, healthcare is just being discovered as a viable market now.  Telemedicine should help drive this forward.

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faryl
faryl
5/17/2016 4:33:05 PM
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Platinum
Re: Too much capital kept too far down the pyramid
It's interesting that this post mentioned Canada. As a typical American, I sometimes forget that industries have opportunities in other countries. There seems to be a tendency to focus on HIPAA concerns when technology around healthcare is discussed, but that just pertains to developing the industry in the US. I wonder how other country's regulations compare to ours.

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batye
batye
5/17/2016 4:38:04 PM
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Platinum
Re: Too much capital kept too far down the pyramid
@faryl in a lot of the tning Canada do copy and follow USA regulations as we are very connected :) 

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