ASIA
01 May 2015
Key technology trends for Australia’s healthcare in 2015
Key technology trends for Australia’s healthcare in 2015 are digitalisation, decentralisation and democratisation, says Frost & Sullivan.
Key technology trends for Australia’s healthcare in 2015 are digitalisation, decentralisation and democratisation, says Frost & Sullivan. Australia is an advanced market for healthcare IT solutions, but fragmentation and lack of standardisation plague the healthcare system
Asia Pacific (APAC) is the fastest growing healthcare information technology (healthcare IT) market across the world. Within APAC, after Japan, Australia is the second largest market for health technology adoption.
Natasha Gulati, Industry Manager, Connected Health, Asia Pacific, Frost & Sullivan said that large, public hospitals are the highest and most frequent spenders on healthcare HIT solutions, but Australia’s many smaller hospitals in rural and remote areas hardly spend anything in health IT. Fragmentation in the healthcare system does not allow the information that has been collected to be managed, shared and used effectively. This fragmentation in the hospital infrastructure prevents a really robust development of health IT across the country.
Australia is a growing market for cloud solutions and services, and digital hospitals will be the mainstay of Australia’s future hospitals. Pharma and medical device companies are also moving toward data driven models and leveraging IT for business model transformation. Together, all this will create the marketplace for health data, although within the constraints of current data security regulations.
Based on these trends, Frost & Sullivan forsees that the key technology trends for healthcare in Australia in 2015 would be the digitalisation, decentralisation and democratisation of healthcare. This will take place through:
· the creation of a marketplace for data
· leverage of big data analytics for clinical decision making
· a growing awareness of population health management
· premium telehealth solutions for urban areas and
· tracing the ‘patient journey’
“Health system fragmentation, resulting in continued episodic care, can be reduced through integrated information systems. Health IT penetration in the country is expected to continue to rise, but mainly in the form of facility upgrades and hi-tech adoption across existing hospitals. Dependable and reliable health data sharing is still a distant dream for Australia, although concerted efforts in this direction have begun” noted Gulati.
Asia Pacific (APAC) is the fastest growing healthcare information technology (healthcare IT) market across the world. Within APAC, after Japan, Australia is the second largest market for health technology adoption.
Natasha Gulati, Industry Manager, Connected Health, Asia Pacific, Frost & Sullivan said that large, public hospitals are the highest and most frequent spenders on healthcare HIT solutions, but Australia’s many smaller hospitals in rural and remote areas hardly spend anything in health IT. Fragmentation in the healthcare system does not allow the information that has been collected to be managed, shared and used effectively. This fragmentation in the hospital infrastructure prevents a really robust development of health IT across the country.
Australia is a growing market for cloud solutions and services, and digital hospitals will be the mainstay of Australia’s future hospitals. Pharma and medical device companies are also moving toward data driven models and leveraging IT for business model transformation. Together, all this will create the marketplace for health data, although within the constraints of current data security regulations.
Based on these trends, Frost & Sullivan forsees that the key technology trends for healthcare in Australia in 2015 would be the digitalisation, decentralisation and democratisation of healthcare. This will take place through:
· the creation of a marketplace for data
· leverage of big data analytics for clinical decision making
· a growing awareness of population health management
· premium telehealth solutions for urban areas and
· tracing the ‘patient journey’
“Health system fragmentation, resulting in continued episodic care, can be reduced through integrated information systems. Health IT penetration in the country is expected to continue to rise, but mainly in the form of facility upgrades and hi-tech adoption across existing hospitals. Dependable and reliable health data sharing is still a distant dream for Australia, although concerted efforts in this direction have begun” noted Gulati.