Identification of disease states and patient types in whom wearable technologies can provide hospital grade information |
Identification of the accuracy of each application may result in some applications converting in-patient to “at-home hospital” monitoring. |
Identification of disease states and patients in whom implanted devices are preferable |
Certain scenarios may be better served by implanted devices, such as patients with existing pacemakers and defibrillators at risk for serious adverse outcomes. |
Definition of states of wellness that can be tracked by wearable devices |
Tracking and maintaining some states of wellness may effectively prevent transition to disease. |
Gaps and challenges
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Description
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Interoperability standards between devices and electronic health systems |
Data ownership needs to be defined, while interoperability standards enable data sharing and auditing between stakeholders, thus reducing barriers for third-party firms to innovate. |
Definition of new sensor reference standards for key cardiovascular metrics |
Not all sensors are equally accurate across clinical scenarios. |
Identification of robust, disease-based applications for each device |
Clinical trials may reveal differential accuracy among devices across populations (eg, atrial fibrillation screening for an older patient versus a young athlete). |
Cost-effectiveness, implementation, ethics, privacy, and safety |
Effect assessment of wearable and implantable devices on resource utilization, costs, and clinical outcomes. |
Evolution of regulatory boundaries |
Establishment of regulatory approaches between different groups, even for the same disease. |