2. Nick van Terheyden, MD CMO, Dell Health and Life Sciences
Twitter http://twitter.com/drnic1
LinkedIn http://www.linkedin.com/in/nickvt
Blog http://drnick.vanterheyden.com/
FaceBook http://www.facebook.com/drnic1
E-Mail DrNick@dell.com, drnic1@gmail.com
AboutMe http://about.me/obiwan
Google Voice (301) 355-0877
Where you can find me
3. 2009 Continua Health Alliance Brigitte Piniewski, MD
0 25 >65
Age
IllnessPre-IllnessWellness
Unpredictable Health
Predictable (Rules-based) Health
Death
60-80% Lifestyle
Modifiable Health
10. › Source: Caroline McSwain (http://carolinemcswain.wordpress.com/2010/10/25/the-internet-a-student%E2%80%99s-greatest-asset-or-worst-distraction/)
Talking
on phone
Surfing
the web?
Watching
television
Reading a
magazine
Listening
to music
Texting
a friend
11. Wearable's and Internet of Things will surpass smartphones
and personal computers by 2018
Internet of Things
Tablets
Smartphone
Personal
Computers
12.
13. Quantified Self
• Ubiquitous, low cost, always on sensors
• Seamless tracking with minimal friction and requiring no behavior change
• Generates interactive easy to understand data and influences behavior
• What Can you Track
– Activity and Weight
– Sleep, Mood
– Cardiac including Heart Rate, Blood Pressure and EKG
– Bloods including Glucose
– DNA and Your MicroBiome
• Incentives may be the Key
14. The Quantified Self
Meet Chris Dancy and His 10 devices he wears or carries and 13
more in his home and car
15. “Patient Engagement is
the blockbuster drug of
the century”
Leonard Kish, Principal and Co-Founder VivaPhi
16. In the next 10 years, data
science and software will do
more for medicine than all of
the biological sciences together
Vinod Khosla
17. The Future of Medicine will be
Predictive, Personalized
Precise, Participatory,
Preventive
19. Nick van Terheyden, MD CMO, Dell Health and Life Sciences
Twitter http://twitter.com/drnic1
LinkedIn http://www.linkedin.com/in/nickvt
Blog http://drnick.vanterheyden.com/
FaceBook http://www.facebook.com/drnic1
E-Mail DrNick@dell.com, drnic1@gmail.com
AboutMe http://about.me/obiwan
Google Voice (301) 355-0877
Where you can find me
Notas del editor
3
http://www.vosizneias.com/111335/2012/08/07/new-york-free-wi-fi-catches-on-with-nycs-subway-riders/
Photo by Paul Lowry, Flickr
Maybe this image is not striking enough?
http://lolyard.com/1980/find-the-odd-one-out
http://polpix.sueddeutsche.com/bild/1.1692756.1370860225/900x600/szforum-unsocial-networks.jpg
http://www.sueddeutsche.de/muenchen/dachau/sz-forum-unsocial-networks-lernen--1.1692687
Students try Tablet PC in the classroom from the students Marisa, Max, Philip and Maria from 7b of the New School Rüsselsheim, Hesse already working with tablet PC in the classroom. The State then moved to its own project. Photo: AP
(Photo: picture alliance / dpa )
Photo by Sarah Wilson
Tech-hungry members of the Village on the Green e-communications committee study up on new advancements in tablet and mobile technology at the Longwood retirement home.
http://www.wpmobserver.com/news/2013/jul/31/seniors-catching-tech/
http://technori.com/2013/04/4281-the-beginners-guide-to-quantified-self-plus-a-list-of-the-best-personal-data-tools-out-there/
Dubai offered gold for weight reduction (Fat for Gold)
Data Assisted Living
http://www.businessweek.com/articles/2014-06-05/is-chris-dancy-the-most-quantified-self-in-america
The result is a multicolor, proliferating array of information that is, according to Dancy, full of unexpected correlations. During his first self-improvement project—to lose 100 pounds—he discovered that he ate worse after binge-watching TV shows. It didn’t matter which show, only that his caloric intake increased whenever he watched episodes of the same show back to back. Now he still might watch four hours of TV, but he mixes it up: an episode of Dexter followed by True Blood, then Californication. He also found he ate better when he slept better and slept better when air quality was better, so he changed the rugs near where his dogs come and go through their door dragging in dust. He says he lost 20 pounds simply by identifying such correlations and changing his behavior accordingly. From there it was a matter of setting rules: If he wanted fast food, for example, he had to walk to get it—until he was ready to adopt plain old exercise routines.
1. Step Detection
An algorithm translates an accelerometer reading into distance traveled and helps estimate activity level and calories burned.
Healthy Range: About 10,000 steps per day
2. Pulse
A sensor opposite an LED monitors fluctuations in light transmitted through your finger. The rise and fall of light indicates heart rate.
Healthy Range: 60 -- 100 beats per minute
3. Heart Rate Variability
A heart rate monitor measures the variation of beat-to-beat intervals. High variability is indicative of good health and a high level of fitness.
Healthy Range: 18 -- 44 percent variability while resting
4. Blood Oxygenation
A pulse oximeter detects the light absorption of hemo-globin to see how much oxygen reaches your extremities. That data helps athletes determine whether they’ve recovered fully from a workout.
Healthy Range: 95 -- 99 percent
5. Body Temperature
A thermometer that sits against the skin assesses surface temperature. Abnormal spikes or drops are early warning signs of sickness.
Healthy Range: 97.6 -- 99.6 degrees Fahrenheit
6. Sleep
Sensitive 3-D accelerometers detect small body movement during the night. When paired with continuous heart rate monitoring, it offers a rough idea of sleep stages -- light, deep, and REM.
Healthy Range: 7-- 9 hours of sleep
7. Blood Sugar
Sensors measure glucose in skin fluid using infra-red light or low-power radio waves. For diabetics, it’s a pinprick alternative. For others, it’s a way to see how diet affects health.
Healthy Range: 80 -- 140 milligrams per deciliter
Leonard Kish
Principal and Co-Founder at VivaPhi
http://www.hl7standards.com/blog/2012/08/28/drug-of-the-century/
First, the evidence for blockbuster drugs. In Dr. Eric Topol’s book “The Creative Destruction of Medicine,” he takes a deep look at the evidence for statins, possibly the biggest group of blockbuster drugs over the last 20 years. Statins are a requirement of Meaningful Use Stage 1 clinical quality measures, as well as key measures for the CMS hospital quality measures used by many organizations, internal and external to the hospital, to grade the quality of care at a hospital. Prescribing statins, in many instances, is no longer optional. Topol states that “of every 100 patients taking Lipitor to prevent a heart attack one patient was helped, 99 were not.” These drugs cost $4 per day per patient and $1500 per year. While they are great at lowering cholesterol, it remains unclear that they do much to prevent heart attacks.
Now let’s take a look at a 2009 Kaiser study of coordinated cardiac care. Compared to those not enrolled in the study, coordinated care “patients have an 88 percent reduced risk of dying of a cardiac-related cause when enrolled within 90 days of a heart attack, compared to those not in the program.” And, “clinical care teams reduced overall mortality by 76 percent and cardiac mortality by 73 percent.”