Healthcare IT's Achilles' Heel: Sensors 84
Nerval's Lobster writes "Tech publications and pundits alike have crowed about the benefits we're soon to collectively reap from healthcare analytics. In theory, sensors attached to our bodies (and appliances such as the fridge) will send a stream of health-related data — everything from calorie and footstep counts to blood pressure and sleep activity — to the cloud, which will analyze it for insight; doctors and other healthcare professionals will use that data to tailor treatments or advise changes in behavior and diet. But the sensors still leave a lot to be desired: 'smart bracelets' such as Nike's FuelBand and FitBit can prove poor judges of physical activity, and FitBit's associated app still requires you to manually input records of daily food intake (the FuelBand is also a poor judge of lower-body activity, such as running). FDA-approved ingestible sensors are still being researched, and it'd be hard to convince most people that swallowing one is in their best interests. Despite the hype about data's ability to improve peoples' health, we could be a long way from any sort of meaningful consumer technology that truly makes that happen."
Wait a second. (Score:1)
I thought the achilles heel of healthcare IT was the dumbass doctors and nurses who put passwords to everything on sticky notes attached to the monitors?
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Wait!? That was a password?
The pharmacy figured that scribble was a prescription and they've been having me stuff strange suppositories up my ass for weeks.
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"The pharmacy figured that scribble was a prescription and they've been having me stuff strange suppositories up my ass for weeks."
Calm down. You aren't getting the wrong medicine. That wasn't the pharmacy's mistake, that was the NSA.
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Wait!? That was a password?
The pharmacy figured that scribble was a prescription and they've been having me stuff strange suppositories up my ass for weeks.
I hate to break it to you, but those aren't suppositories. Around here, we call them "crutches".
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Healthcare IT's actual problem is audit and compliance, oversight and regulation and how it slows adoption of useful technologies.
HIPAA, SOX, PCI compliance for payments, JCAHO audits, internal audits, external audits, record retention laws, the list goes on and on.
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"Healthcare IT's actual problem is audit and compliance, oversight and regulation and how it slows adoption of useful technologies.
HIPAA, SOX, PCI compliance for payments, JCAHO audits, internal audits, external audits, record retention laws, the list goes on and on."
Aaaaaaannnnddd... that leads us into the other big question. Let's say hypothetically the sensors were all working fine. So, then...
Who gets the data?
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The same systems that already get your data, where it has to conform to a pile of other regulations -- some silly, some sensible.
The the external monitors people get sent home with now...
Some data will be kept.
Some data will be discarded.
The kept data will be part of the ever increasing nightmare of healthcare IT data policies.
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"The same systems that already get your data, where it has to conform to a pile of other regulations -- some silly, some sensible."
No, you missed my point.
Say your "sensors" work through a smartphone app. Who is to say the data doesn't get sent to third parties, the way your current smartphone sensor data often does?
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I hate to break it to you, but your health care data isn't anywhere near as private as you think it is.
That's not to say that it's being shared improperly or that it's particularly insecure, merely the fact that the number of people who have perfectly legitimate access to your health care information. We all treat health information like it's some sort of deep dark secret, but all the legislation is quite sensibly based around allowing medical professionals to actually do their jobs. Then of course the peop
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"I hate to break it to you, but your health care data isn't anywhere near as private as you think it is."
You didn't tell me anything I didn't already know, and that's still not the point.
Regardless of whether there is a reality of "privacy" or not (and there is supposed to be), my POINT was that if this runs through something like a smartphone, and things don't change soon, then you'll soon have even LESS privacy than you already have.
I am aware that medical privacy has not lived up to expectations. But there ARE still regulations, and there ARE still expectations.
And I don't agree with you about "leg
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The point is that health information needs to be available to the people who actually need it. In every jurisdiction I have ever worked in your privacy comes second to the doctor, the nurse, catering staff's ability to not kill you. In most places you'll actually have a consent form which will allow them to share this information with additional third parties, but the number of people they don't need that consent for is actually fairly high.
For one, obviously your health insurance company also needs all you
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I'm attempting to make a point about the privacy of medical information and the way most people don't really understand it. Your point about your telco spying on you isn't really all that interesting so there wasn't much to say about it. They can already collect the information from the existing sensors if for some reason they wanted to whether you installed a medical app or not and unless the medical app was deliberately sharing with your Telco relatively trivial security mechanisms would stop them from ge
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Insurance, which uses the information to determine that you are violating your health care policy. That it wasn't an accident that your leg is broken and you have a concussion, but that it was because you were stupidly going 50 mph down the side of a mountain on a gravel road when your tire blew and you hit a tree, therefore you aren't covered. Will that be cash, charge, or will you be remortgaging your home today?
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I'd like to add in RAC audits, Federal Oversight Surveys, anything the OIG has ever done and why not CMS while we're at it.
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Also, I hope you don't have a hospital in California, because if you do, your new technology is going to require us waiting for the new building to be built - because any construction-related infrastructure improvement (to, say, fit in the new full-body scanner) would require earthquake retrofitting the entire building, which is out of the question.
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HIPAA (Score:2)
Now that we have Obamacare, why can't HIPAA be crumpled up and tossed?
The whole point of HIPAA was to keep your health info secret from insurance companies, so that they wouldn't deny you coverage or overcharge you for being a sick person. Of course, that was a stupid idea- insurers don't care about the juicy details of why you're sick. They only care about which policyholders are costing money. You obviously can't keep your insurer from finding out about the claims payments they're making on your behalf. A
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Healthcare IT's actual problem is audit and compliance, oversight and regulation and how it slows adoption of useful technologies.
Exactly - in the biotech field I've heard it referred to as the 17-year problem, because that's the amount of time it can take to get FDA approval for any new tech.
Try to get people to fund or work on your product when it can take up to 20 years to start getting a return on your investment.
New technology is new... (Score:1)
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What are the fucking electrical engineering doing??? Make some fucking sensors!!!
Proptip .. designing robust, reliable and cheap sensors is hard.
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Installing and maintaining them is costly as well.
Finally managing vast amounts of data is difficult as well.
Re:Finally. (Score:5, Insightful)
What are the fucking electrical engineering doing???
We're trying to figure out how to keep your fucking lights on when you don't like nukes, hydro, coal, or natural gas and the wind stops blowing at night.
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Mod ++10
Spoken like a real engineer!
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Everyone wants smaller and cheaper. Better? If it increases the BOM cost by a fraction, forget it.
They should have gone with proven technology (Score:5, Funny)
Instead they went for bluetooth and the damn thing says "enter 0000 in the device" and the damned device is buried 3 cm under the subcutaneous layer of the Gluteus maximus. How am I going to do that?
data mongering (Score:2, Interesting)
And somewhere an NSA analyst is beating himself frantically thinking about the data collected when insurance companies require* everyone to wear one of these.
*With drastically reduced deductibles!
Emergence of cloud medicine (Score:1)
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Simplifying communication with your doctor is cool and all, but I'm more worried about the sensor failing with an "All systems nominal" reading. Some doctors are already too prone to believing your problem is imaginary - without a faulty device telling them that you're fine.
I don't mean to suggest that internal medical sensors are inherently a bad idea; I just think we need to be careful to not let our medicine get too reliant on them.
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That doesn't mean that the pain isn't perceived as real - I have no doubt that people with fibromyalgia hurt. But the pain is inside their brain, not in their muscles or guts. Opioid pain medications are a terrible choice.
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We don't need an other BMI that can be inaccurate (Score:2)
higher muscle mass tends to put them in the overweight category by BMI
BMI also does not account for body frame size
Luckily, it's completely unrelated to BMI (Score:1)
just put down the fork (Score:1)
If you need the "cloud" to tell you to step away from that bag of chips, you have issues that technology (short of unpleasant stuff like wiring your mouth shut) can't solve.
Yeah! Like I want the NSA inside me. (Score:1)
The only place they belong is in my colon.
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NSA response: Okay, bend over and assume the position.
Next thing, ... (Score:2)
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Welcome to Hell (Score:3)
Yeah, because I find that what I'm really lacking in my life is having a insurance executive following me around every minute of the day nagging me about everything I do.
Big data is the wrong way to go (Score:1)
I can't even trust the government not to snoop on my browser history, and you want me to hand a third party a complete record of my day from the inside out?
Athletes (Score:1)
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Clippy 2.0 (Score:2)
Can't wait for Clippy 2.0 and all his sensors.
I see you're smoking. Your health insurance has been revoked automatically.
I see you haven't shat in 2 days. I've ordered an enema from Amazon and emailed your office to let them know you'll be out Monday.
I see you're trying to masturbate. Microsoft Bob will read you 50 Shades of Grey to help maintain engorgement of your genitalia.
Wrong Context (Score:5, Interesting)
I think the author is looking at "Healthcare IT" through the wrong lens. The major advances over the next decade are going to come via "big data" (mind the buzzword) and analytics. For example, I was at an EMC presentation the other day and they were making the case for Greenplum (EMC'ized Hadoop / Map Reduce). One of the breakthroughs they were touting was cancer research. There was a woman who went through half a dozen cancer treatments that did not improve her condition. They were able to run models and simulations and ended up finding an off label drug that put the cancer into remission.
Prior to being able to simulate those complex drug interactions, they never would have been able to test an off label drug like that. Now the potential exists to research all sorts of combinations and treatments that would have been computationally impossible five years ago.
Somewhat less cool is the ability to use analytics to track treatment and billing data. The health care system is so inefficient that there is a lot of low hanging fruit there. It only starts showing up at larger scales, once the data sets get bigger. For example, hospitals cannot really correlate the effectiveness of specific treatments for specific conditions versus their peers at other hospitals. Yet with a big enough data set, statements along the lines of, "Last year, 50,000 people were treated for condition X by 50 different hospitals. Of those 50 hospitals, there were 16 different methodologies used. Of those 16, THIS 1 treatment was the most effective, based on these subsequent observations..."
Take a simple use case... the over prescription of antibiotics. With a decent data warehouse and some analytical tools, it will be possible to quickly zero in on cases where antibiotics were inappropriate prescribed. The same thing goes for everything else. "We noticed you are prescribing the brand name medication, when this generic drug is available, and 85% of your peer organizations are using the generic without any loss of efficiency in treatment."
As much as people dislike the government and feel that the Affordable Care Act is a mixed bag, I have a suspicion that when the government gets into really pinching pennies, they are going to drive down the cost of healthcare.
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Because the government has been so successful at driving down costs in all it's other agencies?
Call me skeptical.
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While I am skeptical, I also see the potential for improvement. There is already a lot of M&A activity in the health care space due to shrinking margins and the inability of hospitals and physicians groups to provide services at prices the market can afford. With a single payer like the government getting involved, costs are going to continue going down. Big data and analytics are going to stabilize some of the price fluctuations for procedures. Currently the payout for any given procedure can fluct
Healthcare IT's Achilles' Heel: The Cloud (Score:5, Insightful)
In theory, sensors attached to our bodies (and appliances such as the fridge) will send a stream of health-related data -- everything from calorie and footstep counts to blood pressure and sleep activity -- to the cloud
No fucking way. My sensors will send my data to my computer in my house where no one else has access to it. Any automated analysis will be done on my computer where I control who can see the results. Any other design is nothing more than putting the band-wagon ahead of patients' interests.
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^ This. This. And a million times, this.
Better hop the GOP does not repeal ACA (Score:2)
So the poor Sensors can be used to black list people
Healthiness (Score:2)
'Despite the hype about data's ability to improve peoples' health.'
Healthiness, here's how:
Eat real food (mostly vegetables and meat/dairy. Not too much grain. Not too much in all).
Get plenty on outdoor activity.
Drink moderate amounts of alcoholic beverages (about 1.5 - 2 times the "recommended levels").
Don't smoke.
Have an engaging and intellectually challenging hobby.
Brush your teeth.
Do fun things.
Data is not the problem (Score:2)
Poor eating habits & inadequate exercise are the problem. But heaven forbid people are responsible for their own actions.
Predictions (Score:2)
Eventually insurance companies will make use of these sensors required in order for you to purchase their policies (or at least not pay exorbitant rates), and of course they'll penalize you if the sensors detect you living an unhealthy lifestyle, not following your doctor's instructions, and so on. And now that we have compulsory insurance in this "free country," there'll be no escaping being surveilled and coerced like this.
Aren't you glad you supported Obamacare? Say goodbye to yet more of your freedom.
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Needs Improvement (Score:2)
Achilles' heel (Score:2)
Perhaps if they put a sensor on the heel they would be able to detect this problem.
The real health problem... (Score:2)
Bringing us up to 1927-level med tech (Score:1)
Nike Fuel Band and Masturbation (Score:2)