The Journal of mHealth Vol 3 Issue 1 (Feb/Mar 2016) | Page 9

7 Digital Trends for Healthcare in 2016 ments, and so on. Because unstructured data is not easily aggregated or understood by most analytics systems and tools, many provider organisations are missing valuable insights on their patient populations that could help them deliver more timely interventions and better outcomes. 7 Digital Trends for Healthcare 2016 For example, a recent study published in the Canadian Medical Association Journal examined more than 11.5 million patient records and found that 38 per cent of diabetic patients in that population were not explicitly coded for diabetes in their patient records. The diagnosis of diabetes was indicated only by the presence of diabetes medications and abnormal blood glucose levels in the unstructured physician notes, medication lists, etc. As expected, those patients with a coded diagnosis of diabetes in their charts were found to have a significantly higher level of care quality than those with un-coded diabetes. Providers like Talix are using their proprietary technology to enable healthcare organisations to deeply mine both structured and unstructured patient data in electronic medical records (EMRs) to uncover valuable patient information for a more comprehensive view of the patient. The Talix HealthData Engine combines a comprehensive medical taxonomy, advanced clinical natural language processing (NLP) technology, and a sophisticated coding and clinical rules database which helps providers, payers and accountable care organissations improve coding efficiency, optimise patient risk scoring and accurately realise reimbursements by uncovering missed or inaccurate codes in structured and unstructured patient data. 4 Mobile First One big move that we will see in 2016 is the introduction of mobile first solutions. In the past digital health solutions and digital healthcare services have been predominantly designed to focus initially on web-delivery, with mobile functions and integration coming as a secondary aspect to the design and business strategy. What we are beginning to see is a significant shift in this focus, towards putting mobile at the heart of the strategy when it comes to designing digitally-enabled services. This is a positive step particularly as in many regions of the world access to a smartphone is considerable higher than access to a computer. 5 Cybersecurity 2015 gained the ominous title as the year of the ‘health hack’ with many major healthcare providers, payers and health insurers experiencing major system intrusions and data losses. According to Stephanie Preston, Cyber Embedded Systems Engineer, at Battelle one of the biggest threats to healthcare systems comes from the type of malware that can affect any standard PC or laptop. The intention of such malware is usually to enslave a particular device making it part of a larger botnet, however, in the case of medical devices or hospital solutions the end result often simply renders the system inoperable and in need of complete reformatting. Continued on page 8 The Journal of mHealth 7