International edition
Global Medical
Business Winter 2023
“Researchers have produced an engineered tissue representing a simplified cerebral cortex by 3D printing human stem cells”
Most Accurate Test to Measure Biological Aging The Crucial Role of DevSecOps in Protecting Healthcare Data
The Top 5 Healthcare Trends in 2023
EXPLORING VOICE-BASED AI IN HEALTHCARE 1
2
3
Contents How To Choose The 10 Emerging Public Health Issues of 2023 Right E-Commerce Platform For Your Health 22 Organization 06
Research: How Successful Health Care Organizations Keep Worker Morale Up 08
Hospitals are in a World of Denial 14
Scientists Develop 3D Printing Method that Shows Promise for Repairing Brain Injuries
Most accurate test to date developed to measure biological aging 24
Exploring Voice-Based AI In healthcare 28
The Top 5 Healthcare Trends In 2023 34
Medical Devices: From Design to Production 36
New Organ-on-aChip Model of Human Synovium Could Accelerate Development of Treatments for Arthritis
The Crucial Role of 38 DevSecOps in Protecting Healthcare Data 30
AI Language Models Could Help Diagnose Schizophrenia
16
Latest Tento+ to be First Generative AI Tool in Medical Complian
42
Patient Engagement: The 21st Century is Calling, Texting and Sending Video
32
Coaching Program Reduces Burnout in Medical Residents 44
18
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01
How To Choose The Right E-Commerce Platform For Your Health Organization By Bjoern Sjut
The healthcare industry is undergoing
■
Access medical records
For example, healthcare organizations
a rapid transformation, with more
■
Order and refill prescriptions
can use e-commerce platforms to:
and more patients turning to online
■
Ask healthcare professionals
channels to access healthcare services and information. To meet this growing demand, healthcare organizations need to invest in a solid e-commerce platform that can help them to know the benefits such as: Improved patient care: E-commerce platforms can help healthcare organizations improve patient care by making it easier for patients to access healthcare services and information. For example, patients can
questions and get advice. Increased revenue: E-commerce
■
Sell their products and services to patients in other countries
■
Offer telemedicine services to
platforms can help healthcare
patients in rural or underserved
organizations increase revenue
areas
by providing new ways to sell their
■
Provide educational resources to
products and services. For example,
patients and customers around the
healthcare organizations can use
globe
e-commerce platforms to sell:
E-commerce management services can
■
Over-the-counter medications
■
Medical supplies
■
Health and wellness products
choose the right e-commerce platform
■
Educational resources
for their needs and ensure that it is
help healthcare organizations
implemented and managed correctly.
use e-commerce platforms to: Expanded reach: E-commerce platforms
Consider these number of factors including:
■
Schedule appointments
can help healthcare organizations
■
Pay for services
expand their reach by allowing them to reach patients and customers worldwide.
6
■
Compliance and security: Choosing
■
Cost: E-commerce platforms
■
Train your staff on how to use the
an e-commerce platform that
can vary in price. It is important to
e-commerce platform. This will
complies with all applicable
choose an e-commerce platform
help ensure they can provide good
healthcare regulations, such as
that fits your budget and offers the
customer service to your patients
HIPAA, is important. Additionally,
features and functionality you need.
and customers.
you need to choose an e-commerce platform with a strong security
■
system to protect patient data.
■
E-commerce platforms can offer
■
Monitor the performance of your
several benefits for healthcare
e-commerce platform and make
organizations. By choosing the right
adjustments as needed. This will
Scalability and growth: You need to
e-commerce platform, healthcare
help you ensure that the platform
choose an e-commerce platform
organizations can improve patient
meets your needs and provides a
that can scale to meet the needs
care, increase revenue, and expand
good experience for your patients
of your growing business. You
their reach.
and customers.
must also choose an e-commerce platform compatible with your
Additional Tips for Choosing and Using
existing healthcare systems.
an E-Commerce Platform for Your Healthcare Organization
■
Features and functionality: You need to choose an e-commerce
■
Read reviews from other healthcare
platform with the features and
organizations. This can help you to
functionality your organization
learn about the pros and cons of
needs. For example, if you plan to sell
different e-commerce platforms.
prescription medications, you must choose an e-commerce platform to
■
process prescriptions electronically.
Contact the e-commerce platform vendor and ask questions. This is a good way to get more information
■
Ease of use: It is important to
about the platform’s features,
choose an e-commerce platform
functionality, and pricing.
that is easy to use for both patients and healthcare professionals. The
■
Make sure that the e-commerce
e-commerce platform should be
platform is compatible with your
easy to navigate and provide clear
existing healthcare systems.
instructions on using its features.
This will contribute to a smooth and efficient transition to using the new platform.
7
Reference Sjut, B. (2023) How to choose the right e-commerce platform for Your Health Organization, Healthcare Business Today. Available at: https://www. healthcarebusinesstoday.com/how-to-choosethe-right-e-commerce-platform-for-your-healthorganization/ (Accessed: 29 September 2023).
02 Research: How Successful Health Care Organizations Keep Worker Morale Up By Jessica Dudley, Milissa Eagle, and Thomas H. Lee
The workforce burnout and retention
a five-point scale, engagement declined
crisis has been dominating health care
.10 the year after the pandemic started
for the last three years, but data (finally)
(calendar year 2021) — the largest decline
shows some encouraging trends.
in engagement for caregivers that Press
Analyses of survey responses from the
Ganey has observed, but the decline has
last three years show that the decline
slowed, with only a .02 decline in 2022.
in workforce “engagement” has flattened out and “resilience” is actually improving.
ALIGNMENT
The data also shows a spreading of the
There was a similar flattening of the rate
pack — with bigger variation between
of decline of alignment, which is assessed
organizations where workforce morale
through measures that reflect providers’
and retention is improving versus others
perceptions of their relationship with
where the slide continues. This article will
organizational leadership. For example,
capture some of the best practices that
if they do not feel respected or that their
have the potential to turn a vicious cycle
voices are heard in decisions that impact
into a virtuous one..
their practice, they are not likely to feel aligned with the organization even if they
SURVEY FINDINGS The following analyses are based on about 1.6 million survey responses from employees of U.S. health care organizations (including over 121,500 physicians) during 2020, 2021, and 2022 conducted by our company, Press Ganey. While burnout has been worsening for all types of health care professionals, three additional metrics provide a more complete picture of what is happening in health care:
are proud of it. This helps explain why so many women physicians have quit.
RESILIENCE There was actually some improvement in 2022 in resilience: the ability to find meaning in work (activation) and recharge when away from work (decompression). (See this article for specific survey items used to gauge both.) The good news is that activation remained stable throughout the pandemic for virtually everyone in health
ENGAGEMENT
care. These are good people motivated
During the last year, there has been
by doing good. But the even better news
a flattening of the downward trend
is that decompression improved in 2022
for engagement, which measures
after two years of steep decline. This data
employees’ emotional bond with the
indicates that caregivers are learning how
organization and their willingness
to cope with the stresses of this era, their
to go above and beyond their job
organizations are doing a better job
descriptions to meet the needs
of supporting them, or both.
of patients and colleagues. Using
8
9
These three encouraging trends don’t
of the contribution of employees,
groups of employees and reveal
apply to everyone. Our data shows
respect and involvement
opportunities to address their specific
a widening gap between the top 10%
in decision-making, manageable
needs. Virtual focus groups and digital
of organizations in workforce
job stress, and adequate staffing.
communities can “bring together”
engagement and the bottom 10%.
employees facing similar challenges
In short, employee engagement
How do we get from a vicious cycle
and enable both connection and
at many organizations is improving,
to a virtuous one? By implementing
opportunity to collaborate and solve
while at others it is getting worse. The
these measures:
shared challenges.
AUTHENTICALLY LISTEN
Crowdsourcing technology allows
data suggests that some organizations are trapped in a vicious cycle in which stress is leading to burnout leading to worse performance leading to more stress. But other organizations (or sub-units of those organizations) are in a virtuous cycle in which pride among caregivers leads to better engagement which leads to better performance which leads to more pride.
The first thing organizations and their leaders should (and can) do immediately is to listen and understand the challenges facing their individual employees and their leaders. What it means to authentically listen changed during the pandemic. It no longer means just getting out for “leadership walk rounds,” surveys every
managers and leaders to involve their front lines in identifying solutions to problems and prioritizing which solutions to start with. By leveraging artificial intelligence (AI) and natural language processing, employee comments can be organized and channeled to reveal both challenges and successes, both of which create opportunities to fix the problems and
The picture that emerges from this
one or two years, or occasional town
data is that health care has dedicated
halls for the shift that happens to be
and hardworking people who have
on duty at midday. It involves not only
been through a lot but, in the right
amassing more information but also
circumstances, still have more to give.
simultaneously showing employees
What are those right circumstances?
that you are doing so.
authentically listening is a sign of respect.
decile of workforce engagement
Today, authentically listening requires
offers insights.
a major shift in the frequency, breadth,
MAKE ENGAGEMENT AND WELL-BEING A PRIORITY
and depth of listening, which can be
While every organization will have
accomplished thanks to technology.
different and unique results from
For example, new tools can empower
its listening efforts, top-performing
managers to perform pulse surveys
organizations all have one thing
scale the existing successful solutions. Many leaders still shudder at the idea of surveying employees when they know the feedback will be painful, but
Data from organizations in the top
Top performers scored markedly higher than others in five specific domains: support from and confidence in senior leadership, recognition
focused on specific issues or specific
10
in common: Senior leaders (often
through surveys, focus groups,
to retain the remarkable people who
including their boards) have prioritized
and other listening approaches.
continue to work in health care.
engagement and well-being. They
Developing leaders and building teams
Organizational leadership that
recognize that an engaged and healthy
is also a critical tactic for maintaining
embraces a coordinated strategy of
workforce is critical for them to provide
virtuous cycles. This requires investments
authentically listening to its employees
excellent patient care and reduce
in coaching and more structured
and patients, developing their leaders,
patient suffering.
training. Focusing on the skills that
and continuously improving workflows
leaders require to engender trust and
will drive the flywheel of pride and
These top performers hold themselves
confidence should be taught so that new
engagement necessary to sustain
accountable for improving every year
leaders have the skills to support and
the virtuous cycle.
and are making the investments
build their teams. Ultimately the goal for
to support this improvement. While
leaders is to create a psychologically safe
they rely on their HR leaders heavily,
environment where those around them
they engage leadership across the
feel comfortable speaking up and out
organization, including nursing,
and actively contribute to improvement.
the importance of employee
physician, and quality and safety leaders to collectively address these issues.
FIX BROKEN SYSTEMS FOCUS ON THREE
AND PROCESSES
IMPROVEMENT AREAS
Finally, top-performing organizations
Next, virtually all top-performing
demonstrate their commitment
organizations focus on doing
to fixing dysfunction in the systems
these things:
and processes currently in place. They fix broken processes, leverage
ENCOURAGE SELF-CARE
technology, and build teams so that
Tactics to support individuals should
they can all work smarter. And they
emphasize the importance of self-care
know that to solve these problems,
— something done poorly in health care.
they must include the voices of their
Organizations should share positive
front lines. They have developed reliable
feedback from colleagues, leaders, and
processes for ensuring that those closest
patients (and the vast majority of patient
to the work are supported in solving
feedback is positive) to demonstrate
the problems. Many organizations
organizational gratitude and respect.
have adopted the approach of GROSS (“getting rid of stupid stuff”) and have
Organizations should both invest
put processes in place to listen to their
in peer-support programs so that
front lines and then implement solutions.
colleagues can identify suffering in their
Others are using new crowdsourcing
ranks and design solutions that will help
technology that enables employees
them. And they should continue their
to submit innovative solutions to
evolution from the traditional in-person
challenges revealed through annual
workplace to one that embraces hybrid
surveying; these organizations
or remote work where possible —
then use these submissions to blaze
an evolution that introduces complexity
a path forward.
for managers but can enhance resilience for their employees.
This continuous reevaluation of systems and processes must be built into the
SUPPORT LEADERS AND TEAMS
organizational frameworks of health care
After listening, the best organizations
providers. This type of approach is one
take their data and go deeper. They
that many organizations have already
identify teams that are facing more
taken to build a safety culture and
obstacles and leaders who are struggling.
improve quality outcomes for
They support the managers of these
patients. It must now be applied
units in developing improvement plans
to organizational efforts to improve
to address specific issues revealed
engagement and resilience in order
11
Reference Dudley, J., Eagle, M. and Lee, T.H. (2023) Research: How successful health care organizations keep worker morale up, Harvard Business Review. Available at: https://hbr.org/2023/05/research-how-successfulhealth-care-organizations-keep-worker-morale-up (Accessed: 29 September 2023).
12
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03
Hospitals Are In A World Of Denial
By Molly Gamble
14
Hospital and insurer contract
The reimbursement rates secured
Data and numbers on denial rates are
negotiations are often framed as an
in contracts are what you can see
not easy to find, but some examination
industry gauntlet, a defined period
above water. Beneath, health insurers
paints a picture rich with variation.
of time with an objective outcome where
are moving faster and kicking harder.
An analysis of 2021 plans on Healthcare.
big talk does not translate to money.
Throughout the first three months of
gov conducted by KFF found nearly
But reimbursement rates secured
2023, about one-third of inpatient and
17 percent of in-network claims were
in new contracts are only one piece
outpatient claims submitted by providers
denied, with rates varying from 2 percent
of hospitals’ payer-induced headaches.
to commercial payers went unpaid
to 49 percent. The reasons for the bulk
for more than 90 days, according
of denials are unclear. About 14 percent
to an analysis from Crowe. “So many
were attributed to an excluded service,
more claims are now surfacing with
8 percent to lack of pre-authorization
some kind of a fallout on a denial,
or referral and 2 percent to questions
a downcoding or a pre-authorization
of medical necessity. A whopping 77
— you know, the proverbial dotting
percent were classified as “all other
the i’s and crossing the t’s, sometimes.
reasons.” Adding to the inconsistency
But what is abundantly clear is it is
is the fact that health plan denial rates
not fundamentally about a clinical
fluctuate year over year. In 2020,
difference,” Mr. Johnson said.
a gold-level health plan offered
Traditionally, a health system and commercial insurer would occasionally run into a wall in the contract negotiation process. This could play out into a dispute palpable enough to consumers that it warranted headlines. These impasses generally lasted a matter of weeks with no significant disruptions before outside pressure drove the parties to compromise. Over the past five years or so, the nature of provider-payer conflicts intensified and may be on the cusp of unprecedented severity given health systems’ financial pressures. At the same time, agreed-upon reimbursement rates are only the tip of the iceberg when it comes to payment health systems can expect from commercial insurers, who have many more defensive plays in their playbook. They boil down to a classic line from a 1968 movie:
by Oscar Insurance in Florida denied Denials were once reserved for a sliver of expensive treatments and have now become common occurrence for mundane, ordinary medical care and treatments such as inhalers or familiar medications for chronic conditions a patient has managed for years. The administrative burden is something close to a requirement to prove residency every month to receive electricity or verifying eligibility to work in the U.S. every week for a paycheck — redundant,
deny, deny, deny.
timewasting activity for ordinary,
Russ Johnson is CEO of LMH Health,
to keep up with what I frankly think
a 102-year-old, independent, nonprofit health system based in Lawrence, Kan. The $350 million organization is anchored by a 174-bed hospital. As he puts it: “We’re not tiny, but we’re not very big.” Mr. Johnson has spent 37 years working in healthcare, holding senior leadership positions in hospitals and health systems
essential things. “For our business office is mischief by the payers in terms of denials, pre-authorization, DRG downcoding and a completely unengaged experience trying to negotiate — or to have our physicians call in and do a peer-to-peer conferences about clinical necessity — it’s demoralizing, frankly,” Mr. Johnson said.
in rural communities and large cities.
“Dealing with denial from our payers
It’s difficult to identify many things
our physicians face.”
is one of the biggest dissatisfiers
going well when it comes to providerpayer relationships, but Mr. Johnson told Becker’s that it’s the payer movements beneath the reimbursement rates that are worsening and causing greater pain today. “The part that’s getting worse is the practices behind and underneath the contracts — the sophistication and implementation of pay practices, information systems, artificial intelligence and computer algorithms that are just denying claims by the thousands every month,” he said.
66 percent of payment requests; in 2021 it denied 7 percent. There is much to learn about the ways AI will shape healthcare, and its potential to further expedite and increase denials is concerning. Cigna faces a classaction lawsuit alleging it bypassed requirements for claim review before denial by having an algorithm — dubbed “PXDX” — complete review before having physicians sign off on batches of denied claims. The lawsuit followed a ProPublica report on the practice, which said Cigna physicians denied more than 300,000 claims over two months in 2022 through the system, which equated to 1.2 seconds of review per claim on average. AI is often touted as a potential, looming replacement to hardworking healthcare professionals, but in the day to day it exacerbates the administrative burdens that already bring them down. “Nobody becomes a physician because they hope to feel like a cog in a factory,” Michael Ivy, MD, deputy chief medical officer of Yale New Haven (Conn.) Health, told Becker’s.
Authors of the 2010 Affordable Care Act worried that provisions to expand health insurance access — such as barring health insurers’ refusal to cover patients with preexisting conditions — could cause them to ratchet up other tactics to make up for the change. With this in mind, the law charged HHS with
“However, between meeting the demands of payers for referrals, denials of payment and increased documentation requirements in order to assure proper reimbursement and risk adjustment, as well as an increasing number of production metrics, it can be difficult not to feel like a cog.”
monitoring health plan denial rates, but oversight has been unfulfilled, leaving denials widespread.
15
Reference Gamble, M. (2023) ‘Hospitals are in a world of denial’, October 2023 Issue of Beckers Hospital.
04
Scientists Develop 3D Printing Method That Shows Promise For Repairing Brain Injuries Researchers have produced an
brain tissue by 3D printing human neural
strong integration, as demonstrated by
engineered tissue representing
stem cells. When implanted into mouse
the projection of neural processes and
a simplified cerebral cortex by 3D
brain slices, the cells showed convincing
the migration of neurons across the
printing human stem cells. When
structural and functional integration with
implant-host boundary. The implanted
implanted into mouse brain slices, the
the host tissue.
cells also showed signalling activity,
structures became integrated with the host tissue.
which correlated with that of the host Lead author Dr Yongcheng Jin
cells. This indicates that the human and
(Department of Chemistry, University
mouse cells were communicating with
The breakthrough technique developed
of Oxford) said: ‘This advance marks a
each other, demonstrating functional
by University of Oxford researchers could
significant step towards the fabrication
as well as structural integration.
one day provide tailored repairs for those
of materials with the full structure and
who suffer brain injuries. The researchers
function of natural brain tissues. The
The researchers now intend
demonstrated for the first time that
work will provide a unique opportunity
to further refine the droplet printing
neural cells can be 3D printed to mimic
to explore the workings of the human
technique to create complex
the architecture of the cerebral cortex.
cortex and, in the long term, it will offer
multi-layered cerebral cortex tissues
The results have been published today in
hope to individuals who sustain brain
that more realistically mimic the human
the journal Nature Communications.
injuries.’
brain’s architecture. Besides their
Brain injuries, including those caused
The cortical structure was made from
by trauma, stroke and surgery for brain
human induced pluripotent stem cells
tumours, typically result in significant
(hiPSCs), which have the potential to
damage to the cerebral cortex (the outer
produce the cell types found in most
layer of the human brain), leading to
human tissues. A key advantage of using
difficulties in cognition, movement and
hiPSCs for tissue repair is that they can
communication. For example, each year,
be easily derived from cells harvested
around 70 million people globally suffer
from patients themselves, and therefore
from traumatic brain injury (TBI), with
would not trigger
5 million of these cases being severe or
an immune response.
potential for repairing brain injuries,
fatal. Currently, there are no effective treatments for severe brain injuries,
The hiPSCs were differentiated into
leading to serious impacts on quality
neural progenitor cells for two different
of life.
layers of the cerebral cortex, by using specific combinations of growth factors
Tissue regenerative therapies, especially
and chemicals. The cells were then
those in which patients are given
suspended in solution to generate two
implants derived from their own stem
‘bioinks’, which were then printed to
cells, could be a promising route to treat
produce a two-layered structure. In
brain injuries in the future. Up to now,
culture, the printed tissues maintained
however, there has been no method to
their layered cellular architecture for
ensure that implanted stem cells mimic
weeks, as indicated by the expression of
the architecture of the brain.
layer-specific biomarkers.
In this new study, the University of Oxford
When the printed tissues were implanted
researchers fabricated a two-layered
into mouse brain slices, they showed
16
these engineered tissues might be
used in drug evaluation, studies of
Senior author Professor Hagan Bayley
brain development, and to improve our
(Department of Chemistry, University of
understanding of the basis of cognition.
Oxford) said: ‘This futuristic endeavour could only have been achieved by the
The new advance builds on the team’s
highly multidisciplinary interactions
decade-long track record in inventing
encouraged by Oxford’s Martin School,
and patenting 3D printing technologies
involving both Oxford’s Department
for synthetic tissues and cultured cells.
of Chemistry and the Department of Physiology, Anatomy and Genetics.’
Senior author Dr Linna Zhou (Department of Chemistry, University of Oxford) said: ‘Our droplet printing technique provides a means to engineer living 3D tissues with desired architectures, which brings us closer to the creation of personalized implantation
Reference Yongcheng Jin, Ellina Mikhailova, Ming Lei, Sally A. Cowley, Tianyi Sun, Xingyun Yang, Yujia Zhang, Kaili Liu, Daniel Catarino da Silva, Luana Campos Soares, Sara Bandiera, Francis G. Szele, Zoltán Molnár, Linna Zhou, Hagan Bayley. Integration of 3D-printed cerebral cortical tissue into an ex vivo lesioned brain slice. Nature Communications, 2023; 14 (1) DOI: 10.1038/ s41467-023-41356-w
treatments for brain injury.’ Senior author Professor Zoltán Molnár (Department of Physiology, Anatomy and Genetics, University of Oxford) said: ‘Human brain development is a delicate and elaborate process with a complex choreography. It would be naïve to think that we can recreate the entire cellular progression in the laboratory. Nonetheless, our 3D printing project demonstrates substantial progress in controlling the fates and arrangements of human iPSCs to form the basic functional units of the cerebral cortex.’
17
05
Patient Engagement: The 21st Century Is Calling, Texting And Sending Video By Will O’Connor, M.D.
18
The healthcare industry is notoriously
environment many hospitals suffer
resistant to new technologies. If you’re
from. Physicians, nurses and support
reading this, you likely know more than
staff often struggle to share information
one doctor still carrying a pager –
effectively, impacting clinical workflow
a technology that has not substantially
efficiencies and patient care.
advanced since the 1980s. It can’t deliver rich information or context. It can’t help
It’s not just doctors’ pagers at issue.
doctors set priorities on their time.
In some cases, there are too many
It is simply the spark that sets the flame
communication tools, some of which
for a game of phone tag.
are favored more by one staff person than another. Some of those tools
Contrast that with the technology
are actually built for other things, like
adoption of the patients. While there
Electronic Health Record (EHR) systems,
are no doubt holdouts among them,
but they have an adjunct texting feature
the average patient is tech-savvy
that might appear to be convenient
today. They carry a smartphone that
while you’re in the EHR, but it doesn’t
delivers constant updates on a variety
reach the right people at the right time
of topics they care about. They’ve
or doesn’t cross department barriers.
grown accustomed to ordering goods
Overhead paging systems create alert
that can be delivered in an hour with
fatigue, adding to the frustration that
those devices. Someone can reach out
is leading to staff burnout across
to them in various modes – text, voice,
the healthcare system.
social media – and they can immediately gather information, exchange views and
Patients are often at the tail end of
take action when necessary.
these dysfunctional systems, waiting for a consult, a lab result or any
Patients are consumers in their lives
information at all about their status.
outside of the hospital or in other care
Patients will benefit substantially from
situations. They expect information
a more unified – rather than fragmented
at their fingertips. So, the level of
– communication experience for
frustration that can build up from being
everyone in the hospital. Incorporating
in the dark about their own health
patients into secure communications not
situation is significant. It’s no fun being
only reduces their anxiety but, in many
sick or injured. That lack of information
routine cases, it can be done through
has implications for their anxiety level,
a secure message without staff having
potential negative impacts on outcomes
to dedicate time to standing in a room.
and certainly degrades their satisfaction with the care experience.
The hospital also benefits from incorporating the patient into the
PATIENT ENGAGEMENT
communication experience. At
SUFFERS FROM FRAGMENTED
discharge, many patients are sent
COMMUNICATION OVERALL
home with instructions, medications and follow-up appointments. If the
Patient engagement challenges stem
hospital can incorporate that patient
from the fragmented communication
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into the communications environment,
the smartphone can supply a wide range
it can assist the patient with adhering
of information, some of which
to instructions and making follow-up
can be automated. Educational
appointments.
information about the patient’s situation could be incorporated into this exchange,
Ensuring patient follow-up means
utilizing video and other media. And yes,
additional revenue and avoiding
the platform I’m describing can easily
readmittance with its potential
replace pagers. We can all move forward
implications for reimbursement rates.
together: doctors, nurses, and patients.
The hospital further benefits from any patient satisfaction metrics that insurers and other institutions keep on quality of care. Patient satisfaction will be based on the totality of care, including what happens to them after discharge.
Reference Will O’Connor, M.D. (2023) Patient engagement: The 21st century is calling, texting and sending video, Healthcare Business Today. Available at: https://www. healthcarebusinesstoday.com/patient-engagementthe-21st-century-is-calling-texting-and-sendingvideo/ (Accessed: 29 September 2023).
THE ANSWER IS IN THE PALM OF YOUR HAND The unified communication experience that connects the patient involves the smartphone that patients, doctors and nurses carry in their pockets. A unified communication platform for all can leverage the smartphone by using an app connected to a larger system that’s potentially in the cloud. Hospital staff can securely communicate in the course of managing workflows. Patients can be incorporated through secure texting. For those who need additional help, family members can be added to the system. Such a platform modernizes patient engagement. It unifies communications by leveraging a ubiquitous tool that everyone already possesses. In some cases, a text can be turned into a phone call with the push of a button. The combination of the overall platform and
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06
10 Emerging Public Health Issues Public health is about more than
essence when it comes to public
retirement age, and there aren’t enough
just responding to health crises such
health threats. By removing the
nursing programs to train new nurses,
as the COVID-19 pandemic. Government
ability of agencies to act, a disease
according to the American Association
public health agencies and nonprofit
can gain a foothold in a population.
of Colleges of Nursing. Similarly, the
organizations run programs aimed
■
Reduced health equity. As illustrated
Association of American Medical Colleges
at protecting health, promoting well-
during the pandemic, COVID
estimates a shortage of up to 124,000
being and preventing disease. They
disproportionately impacted
physicians by 2034.
use their public health authority
communities of color. Preventing
and knowledge to take on social,
laws that would reduce disease
HPSAs
environmental and economic challenges
spread will continue to impact these
Shortages are a public health issue that
that cause chronic and acute diseases,
communities the hardest.
makes it more difficult to operate disease
increase mortality rates, and lower overall health and well-being. Following are 10 emerging public health issues that have grown to new levels or have experts concerned.
1. PUBLIC HEALTH AUTHORITY According to a 2021 report by the Network for Public Health Law, 15 states have proposed or passed laws that would undermine public health authority. This legislation comes in the wake of the controversies over mask requirements and lockdowns as COVID spread across the country. These laws would ban local and state governments from requiring masks, closing businesses or requiring quarantine, among other restrictions. The impact of these laws may be dire, affecting the following.
■
Community spread. Highly communicable diseases will spread more easily, causing widespread sickness and death.
■
■
prevention and other public health and
2. PUBLIC HEALTH
safety programs. Provider shortages will
WORKFORCE SHORTAGE
impact access to and the quality of health
The public health workforce is made
care. According to the Health Resources
up of two components: public health
and Services Administration, 98 million
professionals who work for government
Americans live in a designated Health
agencies, health care nonprofits and
Practitioner Shortage Area (HPSA).
research institutions; and doctors, nurses and other clinical providers. Both
3. PUBLIC HEALTH SPENDING
components have been impacted
The U.S. spends around $3.6 trillion
by worker shortages.
annually on health care, but only about 3% of that is for public health, safety
PUBLIC HEALTH EMPLOYEES
and disease prevention. Programs that
According to the 2021 Public Health
promote wellness can prevent individuals
Workforce Interests and Needs Survey
from requiring more expensive medical
conducted by public health think tank
intervention. The 2022 Build Back Better
de Beaumont, 44% of state and local
Act includes funding for local health
public health workers said they planned
departments, emergency response,
to retire in the next five years. The
expansion of laboratories for disease
majority of respondents said their
monitoring and testing and training
decision to leave public health was
for additional public health workers.
prompted by the backlash against public health initiatives during the
4. HEALTH EQUITY
COVID-19 pandemic.
The disparities in health and well-being due to race, gender and socioeconomic
Loss of expertise. Legislatures that
CLINICIANS
factors has long been a stubborn
take over public health responses
There is a growing shortage of clinical
challenge for public health experts.
may not have the understanding
providers. Some 34% of nurses surveyed
People who lack access to preventive
or knowledge to respond
by health care staffing agency Incredible
health care and treatment for chronic
appropriately to a health threat.
Health said they planned to leave
and acute diseases suffer higher rates
Slow response time. Time is of the
nursing in 2022. More nurses are entering
of disease, disability and death, and
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have less opportunity to live to their
7. THE ENVIRONMENT
same time, public health data — when
full potential. Public health initiatives
As with climate change, the environment
it has personal identifying information
at the local, state and federal levels
has a significant impact on public
removed — can help track and fight
share the goal of achieving health
health. In fact, environmental conditions
diseases and identify food-borne
equity. Examples of health equity
are among the social determinants
illnesses, among other issues. How
initiatives include:
of health that can predict a person’s
to use data to benefit patients, while
health and well-being. The World Health
also ensuring that health data
Organization (WHO) considers air
is protected, will continue to be
pollution to be a significant cause
a public health challenge.
■
Providing health information in different languages
■
Low-cost preventive health services
■
Mobile health screenings
■
Flexible appointment scheduling, or telehealth
■
Focus on wellness to prevent higher-cost medical care
■
Being mindful of cultural differences
5. E-CIGARETTES When manufacturers introduced e-cigarettes in 2006, the devices were initially marketed as a way to quit smoking. They quickly became a method of ingesting tobacco and other drugs, such as marijuana and fentanyl. The use of e-cigarettes became widespread among teens. The dangers of e-cigarettes are many, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). They have caused young people to become addicted to tobacco. They facilitate the abuse of illicit substances, which can lead to overdoses. They also can cause lung damage. A nationwide campaign to combat e-cigarette use among children is one example of a successful public health intervention.
6. CLIMATE CHANGE Drought. Floods. Violent weather. Debilitating heat. Wildfires. Climate change is a public health issue that has already caused death and disruption in many locations around the world. In the U.S., state and local governments can take several steps to combat the impact of climate change on their residents. For instance, some ways that governments can help keep people safe and healthy include establishing urban forest programs to help cool cities, being prepared to fight waterborne pathogens and understanding how air pollution increases cases of asthma.
of illness and death, and it mostly impacts low- and middle-income
PUBLIC HEALTH — THE
populations. But other environmental
CHALLENGE AWAITS
factors impact everyone. The presence
Public health officials understand the
of PFAS, a long-lasting plastic, is found
challenges they face in keeping people
in most people. It has been linked
safe and healthy. From the growing
to cancer, high blood pressure, decreased
attacks on public health authority
fertility and increased cholesterol.
to making sure all people have access to essential health care, the work they
8. HIV/AIDS
do is tough but necessary.
Millions of people have died of HIV/AIDS, and nearly 40 million people around
The Master of Public Health online
the world live with the disease.
at the Keck School of Medicine
It continues to be endemic in many
of USC provides a modern approach
regions. While drug treatments are
to public health management. Learn
available, they are expensive, and many
more about the program to find out
people lack access. There’s no cure
how USC prepares students for
and no vaccine. Despite global efforts,
rewarding careers in health care.
the disease continues to spread. Research into a vaccine is ongoing.
9. RURAL HEALTH People living in rural areas face a number of public health challenges. They often live in provider-shortage areas and lack access to primary care doctors, specialists and hospitals. People in remote regions often have to drive hours to receive care, or to give birth. The opioid epidemic, while widespread throughout the country, has ravaged rural communities. Telehealth is one solution to the provider shortage, as it can help monitor patients with chronic illnesses and allow people to receive care at home.
10. DATA PRIVACY Data privacy may seem an unlikely public health issue. However, public health experts say data privacy is an essential human right. Many consumers may not be aware that when they use a mobile wellness app, their data can end up in the hands of companies that don’t follow data privacy laws. At the
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Reference 10 emerging public health issues of 2023: USC MPH (2023) Online Masters in Public Health. Available at: https://mphdegree.usc.edu/blog/10-public-healthissues-of-2023/ (Accessed: 13 October 2023).
07
A team of European researchers has developed a new test that can accurately measure biological aging in a clinical setting. The discovery was made while studying patients for the aging effects of chronic kidney disease.
Most Accurate Test to Date Developed to Measure Biological Aging
The new test is an epigenetic clock - a type of biochemical assessment that looks at DNA to understand how well the body is aging in contrast to its chronological age - and is the first of these cutting-edge tests to be proven to perform accurately in a clinical setting, in both healthy and unhealthy tissue. The work was led by a partnership between the University of Glasgow and the Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, and is published in the Journal of Internal Medicine as part of a study into the aging effects of chronic kidney disease and its associated treatments. The research team studied more than 400 patients with chronic kidney disease in Sweden alongside around 100 matched population controls, to better understand the impact on ageing of the disease, including during dialysis treatment and after kidney transplant. To do this, researchers used a range of tests including blood biomarkers, skin autofluorescence and epigenetic clocks. The team used the clocks to measure the change in biological age of around 47 patients one year after kidney transplantation, or one year after the start of their dialysis treatment, as well as how the healthy tissue in 48 controls aged by comparison. The results showed that for patients with chronic kidney disease, their biological clock is ticking faster than the average person’s. This continues to be the case even after dialysis treatment. Indeed, patients’ biological clocks were only shown to slow down following a kidney transplant. However, while the epigenetic clocks all showed a similar picture, the research team found that none of the current clocks could be shown to be accurate in a clinical setting, and all were found to be inaccurate to differing degrees when tested in healthy tissue over time. To address this, the team developed a new, more accurate epigenetic clock - the Glasgow-Karolinska Clock - that works on healthy and unhealthy tissue. The results from this new clock matched what
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doctors saw in patients with chronic
on the extent of biological as opposed
has real potential to be able to evaluate
kidney disease, and also appeared
to chronological ageing in chronic kidney
lifestyle interventions, including
to accurately assess healthy tissue too.
disease patients. Our findings, using
diet, that could benefit the public
This study is the first real-world test
the new Glasgow-Karolinska Clock -
and help to address issues such
of epigenetic clocks in a normal ageing
show that not only are these patients
as health inequalities.”
setting, and against clinical parameters.
aging faster than people in the general population, their accelerated aging only
Peter Stenvinkel, Professor at Karolinska
As the body ages, a series of factors
slows down once they have had
Institutet, said: “I found the new tool
lead to epigenetic changes and loss
a transplant. Treatment with dialysis
to estimate effects of interventions
of a chemical tag (DNA methylation)
does not appear to impact this process.
on biological age of much interest.
from your DNA. This is often
“This is also the first clinical test
The tool could be used to study
associated with a range of disease
of epigenetic clocks, and the discovery
treatment strategies in patients with
common to ageing, such as chronic
that most are inaccurate when compared
end-stage kidney disease - a group
kidney disease, cancer and heart
with medical evidence has led us to
subjected to premature aging.”
disease. Epigenetic clocks have been
develop a new more accurate test which
proposed as a ‘gold standard’ for
can accurately measure methylation
measuring age accurately, beyond
tags on DNA of both healthy and
a person’s biological age, as they are able
unhealthy tissue. We have proven
to measure methylation tags on DNA.
it is accurate to the high standards of a clinical setting.
Professor Paul Shiels, lead author of the study for the University of Glasgow, said:
“Methylation tagging of DNA is impacted
“This study is the first time in a clinical
by what we eat and also out gut
setting that we can accurately report
microbiome. As a result, this new clock
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Reference Ognian Neytchev, Helen Erlandsson, Anna Witasp, Louise Nordfors, Abdul Rashid Qureshi, Ken Iseri, Hokuto Morohoshi, Colin Selman, Thomas Ebert, Karolina Kublickiene, Peter Stenvinkel, Paul G. Shiels. Epigenetic clocks indicate that kidney transplantation and not dialysis mitigate the effects of renal ageing. Journal of Internal Medicine, 2023; DOI: 10.1111/ joim.13724
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08
Voice recognition technology has become commonplace in society, with personal assistant programs gaining frequent use across countless mediums. As described in Forbes, AI and ML are increasingly used in healthcare applications to expand clinical efficiency, boost diagnosis speed and accuracy, reduce physicians’ duties, and improve patient outcomes. Healthcare
Exploring Voice-Based AI In Healthcare
AI can also help with administrative tasks like appointment scheduling and insurance claims processing, freeing up time for clinicians to focus on patient care. Especially during the pandemic, voice AI bots helped to screen patients;
Dr. Rekha Bhandari
for instance, Apple’s Siri guided users through the CDC’s COVID-19 evaluation questions.
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As a result of voice-based technology,
if it has not encountered a specific
faster and more accurately. With
patients can get prompt answers to their
sequence of words before. ChatGPT
appropriate privacy and security
questions about symptoms, therapies,
generates a response based on facts
safeguards, big data can further
and pharmaceutical availability using
on its server. According to the company,
advance machine learning and
smart healthcare voice assistants like
ChatGPT may also acknowledge errors,
artificial intelligence technologies
Alexa and Google Home. Voice assistants
respond to follow-up inquiries, and
in healthcare.
can also offer patients up-to-date
dismiss inappropriate ones.
information on their mental health; audio acoustics change in response
Dr. Victor Tseng co-authored a 2023
to a person’s health. These audio qualities
study in which ChatGPT demonstrated
can help diagnose various physical
that it could pass a medical licensing
and mental diseases and conditions.
exam. He claimed that his coworkers
Chatbots—computer programs that
experimented with ChatGPT and were
simulate and process written or spoken
intrigued when it correctly identified
human conversation—also allow
fictitious patients in hypothetical
people to interact with digital devices
situations. He asserted that it could
as though they were communicating
pass the three-part medical exam
with a live person.
that U.S. medical students must pass to be licensed to practice medicine.
CURRENT TRENDS
Tseng’s research group used 305
According to the National Center
questions from the June 2022 sample
for Biotechnology Information (NCBI),
test made available to the public. They
in 2020, the World Health Organization
were not part of the data set used to train
developed a chatbot via WhatsApp and
ChatGPT, and without any specialized
Facebook to find answers about how
training, the chatbot nearly passed
to protect themselves from COVID-19
all the exam’s components.
2. BETTER EXPIRIENCE Voice recognition, as it continues to improve, will support faster and easier transactions and exchanges, improving patient experience. This technology could translate to easier appointment-making, quick and more accurate intake of medical histories and other patient data, and the application of insurance, billing, and payment matters.
3. IMPROVED CARE Voice recognition can reduce the burden of information exchange and data collection between patients and physicians and allow more attention to the patient-professional relationship.
4. NEW INSIGHT As voice recognition technology advances, it will yield insight beyond
and how to understand news and facts related to the disease. This started
THE FUTURE
what the patient says to provide
a trend in chatbots in the healthcare
According to the National Center for
more reliable evidence about how
market; health chatbots are anticipated
Biotechnology Information (NCBI),
the patient is doing. The patient’s voice
to grow by over $498 million by the end
in 2020, the World Health Organization
will become a data source, similar
of 2029. Chatbot technology can assist
developed a chatbot via WhatsApp
to blood pressure, temperature,
consumers in scheduling appointments
and Facebook to find answers about how
and other vital signs.
and acting as health consultants.
to protect themselves from COVID-19 and
Those working in healthcare
how to understand news and facts
and technology should continue
Recently, ChatGPT, a natural language processing tool driven by AI developed by the company OpenAI, has attracted the attention of researchers and medical professionals. ChatGPT collects web data stored on a server by a human
A.J. Ghergich, a Forbes Technology Council member, recently outlined four major ways he believes voice recognition could improve healthcare:
1. MORE DATA
programmer. The algorithm can
Getting data into electronic health
anticipate which word will appear
records (EHRs) must be easier, faster,
in a sentence based on context;
and more accurate. Voice recognition
it can answer questions even
can enable placing data into EHRs
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to follow these trends, looking for ways to collaborate to learn how to best serve patients using voice-based and other intelligent technologies.
Reference Bhandari, Dr.R. (2023) Exploring voice-based AI in Healthcare, Healthcare Business Today. Available at: https://www.healthcarebusinesstoday.com/exploringvoice-based-ai-in-healthcare/ (Accessed: 02 October 2023).
09
The Crucial Role of DevSecOps In Protecting Healthcare Data By Archie Agarwal
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Data breaches in the healthcare
lost revenue. However, in the healthcare
of device safety and the Quality System
industry are increasingly common,
sector, the consequences
Regulation (QSR), adopting secure by
with the U.S. Department of Health
are potentially fatal.
design principles, ensuring transparency,
and Human Services reporting 875
implementing security risk management
breaches of unsecured protected health
Inevitably, a data breach in the healthcare
practices, establishing a robust security
information since December 2020 – that’s
industry is also a HIPAA violation. The
architecture, and conducting thorough
more than one per day. This alarming
severity of the violation determines
testing with objective evidence.
statistic highlights the urgent need for
different levels of penalties, with the
robust cybersecurity measures within
2022 HIPAA penalty structure imposing
SECURE BY DESIGN
healthcare organizations.
fines that can reach up to $2 million.
Adopting the right DevSecOps tools
Healthcare data breaches can result
automatically yields many of these
Hackers are drawn to healthcare
in fees and fines from multiple additional
principles. For example, security
organizations due to the value of the
entities such as the U.S. Department
by design, security risk management,
patient information they store, including
of Health and Human Services (HHS),
and appropriate physical and technical
personal health data, financial details,
the Federal Trade Commission (FTC),
safeguards are all byproducts
and insurance information. This data
and state Attorneys General.
of implementing an ongoing threat
is in high demand on the black market,
modeling program. Such proactive
making healthcare organizations
Any amount of money spent by
measures are essential for protecting
lucrative targets. However, the risks
a healthcare organization to prevent
medical devices and preventing data
extend beyond health records. According
a data breach or safeguard their devices
breaches. A threat model itself serves
to a recent report from the FBI, 53%
is probably worth it when considering
as evidence for device manufacturers
of digital medical devices in the US,
these costs, but it doesn’t have
to demonstrate to the FDA the security
as well as internet-connected tools
to break the bank.
of their devices. By implementing these
in hospitals, are at risk of cyberattack.
types of DevSecOps tools, healthcare
Though it may seem impossible, devices
MITIGATION STRATEGIES OFFER
organizations can proactively safeguard
including pacemakers, defibrillators,
TOO LITTLE TOO LATE
sensitive data and IoT devices while
insulin pumps, nurse call buttons, and
For healthcare organizations, establishing
optimizing their operations.
numerous other crucial medical devices
a strong, proactive cybersecurity
are vulnerable – many of which are
foundation and compliance posture
The benefits of implementing
lifesaving. Malicious actors who breach
is imperative. It is crucial to recognize
DevSecOps practices extend beyond
these devices can manipulate them
that the presence of one secure device
efficiency gains and cost savings.
to provide inaccurate data, administer
does not guarantee overall security – if
A proactive and ongoing DevSecOps
excessive doses of medication, or pose
even one unsecured device remains
strategy provides peace of mind
other risks to a patient’s health.
undetected, the organization’s entire
for organizations, patients, and
ecosystem is at risk.
stakeholders by ensuring proper
Clearly, there is a lot more to protect
utilization of healthcare resources.
than just data, and unfortunately, these
The need for proactive cybersecurity
By implementing preventive measures,
breaches aren’t going to stop anytime
for healthcare organizations has gotten
healthcare organizations can mitigate
soon. Implementing effective and
so serious that effective March 30, 2023,
risks, maintain a secure environment,
proactive DevSecOps practices is crucial
the US Food and Drug Administration
and safeguard the well-being of both
for healthcare organizations to protect
(FDA) mandated that medical device
patients and their business.
their businesses, their patients’ data,
manufacturers include cybersecurity
and most importantly, the overall
information in their premarket device
safety of their patients.
submissions Further, the FDA will refuse submissions lacking adequate
A COST OF A HEALTHCARE
cybersecurity measures from
BREACH IS MORE THAN
October 1, 2023, onwards.
MONETARY Whenever any company falls victim
Perhaps most importantly, the FDA
to a data breach, they face numerous
has introduced guidance for medical
costs both directly and indirectly
device manufacturers, with six key
associated with recovering from the
principles for protecting devices.
incident. These costs include everything
These principles include incorporating
from incident response expenses to
cybersecurity as an integral part
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Reference Agarwal, A. (2023) The crucial role of DevSecOps in protecting healthcare data, Healthcare Business Today. Available at: https://www. healthcarebusinesstoday.com/the-crucial-role-ofdevsecops-in-protecting-healthcare-data/ (Accessed: 02 October 2023).
10 Latest Tento+ to be First Generative AI Tool In Medical Complian Tento+ has announced
takes 3-7 years to reach the market
and more. Users can also understand
that the latest iteration of its
and compliance is cited as one
automatically which design standards
ground-breaking dashboard will
of top concerns for business leaders.
apply to their device and generate
serve as the first ever generative AI tool being used in the medical compliance sector. Tento+ is on course to enhance and boost the evolution of the medtech market across the world as more medical devices are set to enter service across a wide range of medical sectors in response to a diverse and ever-growing range of health needs. The medical device market has undergone consistent levels of growth over the past decade and is projected to grow at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 5.4% in forecast period 2021 - 2028. The World Health Organisation reports that there are an estimated 1.5 million medical devices globally, across more than 10,000 specific types. However, it is reported than the average medical device
automated checklists that are required. To account for the spiralling demand
In a recent trial of five projects using
for regulatory approval of new medical
Tento+, the AND Technology Research
devices, Tento+ has leveraged generative
team was able to calculate how much
AI to streamline the process for
time Tento+ can save a company
any business. Already, the Tento+
when working through the medical
team has documented and tested
submission regulation process.
significant time savings. For the average project/submission, 236 hours of time
Commenting on the launch of Tento+
could be saved by using Tento+’s
and the trial findings, CEO of Tento+,
generative AI-tool.
Dr Nicola Thorn said: “The potential of generative AI in medical compliance
Tento+’s AI-powered in-built tool guides
is enormous. From authoring content
and supports companies with meeting
to assessing changes on a device, the
the compliance requirements; it’s
generative AI is the first tailored to the
a one-stop-shop for companies looking
world of medical compliance. It is fine-
to develop medical devices, and
tuned with expert input and tested
to manage their design controls.
on hundreds of devices. This is proving to be a genuine game changer!
The tool allows users to enter a brief device description, and then provides tailored insights and suggestions for design requirements, test plans,
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“So many innovators and engineers struggle in navigating the regulation process and not knowing where to start. This no longer has to be the case.
There are many hurdles, so many complex considerations to make, and it bleeds businesses’ time and money. This is where the power of generative AI comes in. Tento+ has always offered a simple platform, that aides and speeds up management of design control process. And now, our algorithm means that the whole of Tento+ is tailored directly to your device, specifically generated for your product. “It’s a ‘world first’ that’s set to change the world for medical compliance! Anyone interested should book a demo with us today.”
OTHER TENTO+ FEATURES: Users will also be able to capture and analyse certain technical, risk and clinical information directly in Tento+. Users will then be able to record traceability matrices, testing records and anomalies as well as risk and usability controls. From here, users can automatically generate technical documentation such as test plans, test logs and records, software decompositions and software requirements for use within submissions to regulatory bodies. Tento+ dashboard is a purposebuilt web-based tool that enables developers, project managers, QR, and test engineers to track, manage, and organise their product development and testing journey. The dashboard provides engineers with quick insights into the progress of their project as test scripts, anomalies, and the requirements traceability matrix are all accessible in one place. Thanks to end-to-end visibility across the software testing lifecycle, development teams can now easily map and visualise the relationship and test coverage of user requirements, software function, unit, and code. References: https://www.med-technews.com/news/MedtechRegulatory-News/latest-tento-to-be-first-generativeai-tool-in-medical-compl/.
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11
The Top 5 Healthcare Trends In 2023 Bernard Marr
as processing insurance claims and management or analysis of medical record keeping. It can also be used to analyze data collected from patient wearables or in-home sensors used in virtual hospital settings (more on that in my next trend) to provide early warning or predictive diagnosis of various conditions. Put together, all of these use cases indicate that AI and ML will continue to be a prominent trend in healthcare throughout the coming year.
The world is a very different place than it was ten years ago, and nowhere is this more evident than in healthcare. The aftermath of the covid-19 pandemic, combined with the financial downturn and an acceleration in the adoption of technology and digitization, have dramatically changed the landscape for everyone, patient or practitioner. Here’s my overview of what I believe will be the most important trends of the next 12 months:
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE IN HEALTHCARE The market for Artificial intelligence (AI) – specifically, machine learning (ML) tools in healthcare is forecast to top $20 million in 2023. Various AI-aligned technologies, such as computer vision, natural language processing, and pattern recognition algorithms, are already deeply embedded in the healthcare ecosystem and will continue to be adopted as evidence of their usefulness grows throughout 2023. Some examples of areas where AI is used include drug discovery, where it can assist with predicting outcomes of clinical trials and potential side effects of new drugs, as well as analysis of medical imagery, which involves using computer vision algorithms to spot early warning signs of disease in x-rays or MRI scans. It has also successfully been used to detect and treat neurological disorders, including Parkinson’s Disease and Alzheimer’s Disease. Outside of frontline clinical work, AI also has applications in clerical work, such
Healthcare delivered remotely increased significantly during the pandemic. Even now that it’s generally safe to resume face-to-face routine appointments, many patients and providers have realized that for many conditions, care can be provided more efficiently and cost-effectively at a distance. Remote healthcare falls into a number of different categories. There is an increase in home-based care driven by evidence that shows that a familiar environment and proximity to a family can have a positive effect on patient outcomes, as well as being hugely cost-efficient compared to inpatient care. Then there is telemedicine, which
to specific health conditions, where
covers everything from video calling
users can come together to share help
your doctor rather than visiting their
and advice related to their treatment
surgery to remote surgery, where
and recovery. Some examples of these
a surgeon carries out surgery on
include Patients Like Me, Care Opinion,
a patient in a remote location using
and cancer.org.
robotic technology. Another remote healthcare model is the virtual hospital
With the cost of delivering in-person
ward, which involves practitioners
healthcare continuing to rise, and
in a centralized location providing care
ongoing shortages of medical
for a number of remote patients, often
practitioners in many countries,
with related conditions. Another initiative
it’s a safe bet that all varieties
involves enabling patients to complete
of remote healthcare will
more of the procedures that are related
be a growing trend in 2023.
to their illness and treatment at home before being admitted to hospital. In the
RETAIL HEALTHCARE
UK, for example, it’s planned that this
According to researchers at Forrester,
will be rolled out in 2023 to all patients
the amount of healthcare business
facing hospital stays for surgery.
conducted through retail outlets will double during 2023. This is becoming
Additionally, there is a growing
an increasingly visible trend as retailers
understanding of the importance
like Walmart, Amazon, and CVS offer
of online communities, which may
healthcare services such as blood tests,
be patient-led rather than practitioner-
vaccinations, and medical check-ups that
led, or may be run by charities linked
have traditionally been delivered
34
by hospitals, clinics or doctors’ practices.
heart rate and blood oxygen levels to
delivery that is personalized specifically
This trend will become more prominent
smart watches capable of sophisticated
to them. This includes the concept
as global economic conditions lead
scans such as ECGs, smart textiles that
of precision medicine, where drugs and
to squeezed budgets at traditional
can detect blood pressure and predict
other treatments are specifically tailored
frontline primary care facilities. This
the risk of heart attacks, and smart gloves
to a group of patients – based on factors
is compounded by Retail healthcare
that can reduce the tremors suffered
such as age, genetics or risk factors –
providers leveraging consumer
by patients with Parkinson’s Disease.
rather than administered on a one-size-
expectations of streamlined customer
As well as physical illness, a growing
fits-all approach. The most advanced
experience and choice to create services
emphasis is being placed on developing
and precise forms of personalized
that patients will increasingly find
wearable devices capable of monitoring
healthcare take into account a person’s
a more convenient and better value
and detecting signs of mental illnesses.
genetic information or genome and can
than traditional primary care delivery.
A study was published this year showing
help healthcare practitioners predict how
As Forrester’s research puts it, “In 2023,
how physical indicators such as activity
effective specific drugs will be or whether
patients will choose retail health
levels, sleep patterns, and heart rate can
they are likely to suffer from side effects.
for their primary care needs as health
be used to detect when individuals may
AI and ML algorithms are sometimes
systems, constrained by inadequate
be at risk of depression, and we may start
used to assist with these predictions.
resources, fail to match retail’s
to see medical wearables incorporating
elevated patient experiences.”
some of this functionality soon.
The term personalized healthcare is also sometimes used in relation
Retail healthcare providers are typically
In 2023, we will increasingly see wearable
to moves to allow patients to make
more accessible and may not require
medical devices acting as “edge” devices,
more choices about how their care
appointments to be booked in advance,
which means they will be equipped with
is planned and delivered. This usually
compared to traditional healthcare
processors and capable of utilizing
involves drawing up a personal treatment
providers. They are also less affected
in-device analytics rather than requiring
plan for an individual, considering their
by the shortages of trained clinical
that data is sent back and forward
own circumstances, opinions and beliefs
staff that many countries are currently
between the device and the cloud
when making choices about how and
experiencing – a problem that
to be processed. This has two main
where they should be treated. As is also
is only predicted to worsen.
benefits: The first is privacy, as sensitive
true in industry and the wider economy
patient personal data never has to leave
outside of healthcare, every form of
WEARABLE MEDICAL DEVICES
the device. Secondly, there’s speed –
personalization is likely to be a major
Wearable devices will be increasingly
which is critical in the case of devices
trend throughout 2023.
used by individuals during 2023 to track
designed to detect and warn
their own health and exercise activity,
of potentially life-threatening
as well as by clinicians to monitor
conditions in real time.
patients remotely. The “Internet of Medical Things” has rapidly expanded
PERSONALIZED HEALTHCARE
in recent years from simple devices
During 2023, patients will have more
designed to track vital signs such as
opportunities to receive healthcare
35
References: Marr, B. (2023) The top 5 healthcare trends in 2023, Forbes. Available at: https://www.forbes.com/sites/ bernardmarr/2022/12/06/the-top-5-healthcare-trendsin-2023/?sh=1a036481565b (Accessed: 02 October 2023).
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12
Medical devices: from design to production By Henrique A Almeida and Rui B Ruben
A medical device is an instrument,
These results demonstrate increasing
apparatus, implant, in vitro reagent,
interest in research and development
or similar or a related article that
of medical devices within the industrial
is used to diagnose, prevent, or treat
and academic communities. Not only
diseases or other medical conditions
the numbers of published papers have
and does not achieve its purposes
increased as demonstrated, but
through chemical actions within
also the numbers in healthcare has
or on the body such as drugs. The main
also increased. According to Shih,
goal of any medical device is to improve
the investment in healthcare
the patient’s daily quality of life or well-
is increasing at a very high rate and will continue to grow.
being during diagnosis, treatment, and/or medication. Over the last decade, the medical device industry is a fast-growing and demanding industry. Advances in design, materials, and technologies have increased the potential to develop improved solutions for all medical applications. These advances have managed to supply the clinicians with new products, tools, and procedures, supporting them in their work by making surgery, diagnosis, or treatment processes easier
This special collection intends to bring together industrial and academic researchers willing to present new design methodologies, material selection and manufacturing processes, and medical device case studies, illustrating new developments in both product design and prototype methods. Topics may include, but are not limited to the following:
■
than ever before. These advances have also aimed to reduce both lead times
Medical device design and prototyping;
■
and costs in the production
Design for multi-scale manufacturing;
of existing medical devices, reducing
■
Biomaterials and processing;
global health-care costs.
■
Multi-scale material modeling and process simulations;
Due to this fact, medical devices are a hot topic among the industrial and
■
Tissue engineering and regenerative medicine;
academic domains regarding issues such as design, materials, prototypes,
■
Additive manufacturing processes;
or manufacturing processes. For
■
Machining, forming, electro-
instance, after performing a search
discharge machining (EDM) and
on the SAGE Journals Publishing
electrochemical machining (ECM),
platform with the combination of both
laser-based processing, casting
words “medical” and “devices” in the
and molding, and others;
titles, a total of 129 results were obtained.
■
tooling, fixturing, sensors systems,
Based on the results, between 1932 and
and control;
1989, 10% of the papers were published. Then the next two decades, the number
Machines and equipment including
■
Metrology, material handling, joining, and assembly;
of papers increased to 21% (1990–1999) and 27% (2000–2009). Since 2010, the
■
Prostheses and orthoses;
number increased dramatically, reaching
■
Implants;
42% of the papers being published.
■
Robotics in medicine.
40
References: 1. Ciurana J. Designing, prototyping and manufacturing medical devices: an overview. Int J Comp Integ M 2015; 27: 901–918. 2. Ciurana J., Rezende R. New opportunities and challenges for additive manufacturing to produce biomedical devices. IFAC Proc 2013; 46: 283–288. 3. Fiorentino A, Marenda GP, Marzi R, et al. Chapter 89. Rapid prototyping techniques for individualized medical prosthesis manufacturing. In: Da Silva Bartolo PJ (ed.) Innovative developments in virtual and physical prototyping. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press, 2012, pp.589–594. 4. Shih AJ. Biomedical manufacturing: a new frontier of manufacturing research. J Manuf Sci E: T ASME 2008; 130: 210091–210098.
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13 New Organ-on-a-Chip Model of Human Synovium Could Accelerate Development of Treatments For Arthritis 42
The synovium is a membrane-like
The new synovium-on-a-chip model
cell and tissue types) can be added.
structure that lines the knee joint and
is a three-dimensional microfluidic device
In addition, we envisage that our model
helps to keep the joint happy and healthy,
that contains human synovial cells and
could eventually form part of the drug
mainly by producing and maintaining
blood vessel cells. The device is subjected
discovery pipeline in an industrial setting.
synovial fluid. Inflammation of this
to mechanical loading, which mimics
Some of these conversations have
tissue is implicated in the onset and
the forces applied to the synovium
already commenced.”
progression of arthritic diseases such
during joint movement.
as rheumatoid and osteoarthritis.
The researchers are currently using
Therefore, treatments that target the
The developed synovium-on-a-chip
the synovium-on-a-chip model to study
synovium are promising in treating
model was able to mimic the behaviour
the disease mechanisms of arthritis and
these diseases. However, we need better
of native human synovium, producing
to develop stratified and personalized
models in the laboratory that allow
key synovial fluid components and
organ-on-a-chip models of human
us to find and test new treatments.
responding to inflammation. This
synovium and associated tissues.
We have developed an organ-on-a-chip
suggests that the new platform has
based model of the human synovium,
immense potential to help researchers
“We believe that our synovium-on-a-chip
and its associated vasculature,
understand disease mechanisms
model, and related models of human
to address this need.
and identify and test new
joints currently under development
therapies for arthritic diseases.
in our lab, have the potential to transform pre-clinical testing, streamlining delivery
Researchers at Queen Mary University of London have developed a new organ-
“Our model is the first human,
of new therapeutics for treatment
on-a-chip model of the human synovium,
vascularised, synovium-on-a-chip
of arthritis,” Prof. Martin Knight, Professor
a membrane-like tissue that lines
model with applied mechanical loading
of Mechanobiology said. “We are excited
the joints. The model, published
and successfully replicates a number
to share this model with the scientific
in the journal Biomedical Materials,
of key features of native synovium
community and to work with industry
could help researchers to better
biology,” said Dr Timothy Hopkins,
partners to bring new treatments
understand the mechanisms of arthritis
Versus Arthritis Foundation Fellow, joint
to patients as quickly as possible.”
and to develop new treatments for this
lead author of the study. “The model
group of debilitating diseases.
was developed upon a commercially available platform (Emulate Inc.), that
In the UK, more than 10 million people
allows for widespread adoption without
live with a form of arthritis, which affects
the need for specialist knowledge of chip
the joints and can cause pain, stiffness,
fabrication. The vascularised synovium-
and swelling. There is currently no cure
on-a-chip can act as a foundational
for arthritis and the search for new
model for academic research, with
therapeutics is limited by a lack
which fundamental questions can
of accurate models.
be addressed, and complexity (further
43
Reference: 1. Clare L Thompson, Timothy Hopkins, Catrin Bevan, Hazel R C Screen, Karina T Wright, Martin M Knight. Human vascularised synovium-on-a-chip: a mechanically stimulated, microfluidic model to investigate synovial inflammation and monocyte recruitment. Biomedical Materials, 2023; 18 (6): 065013 DOI: 10.1088/1748-605X/acf976 2. Queen Mary University of London. “New organ-ona-chip model of human synovium could accelerate development of treatments for arthritis.” ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 12 October 2023. www.sciencedaily.com/ releases/2023/10/231012111714.htm
44
45
14
AI Language Models Could Help Diagnose Schizophrenia 46
Scientists at the UCL
the way the brain learns relationships
The team from UCL and Oxford now plan
Institute for Neurology have
between memories and ideas, and stores
to use this technology in a larger sample
developed new tools, based
this information in so called ‘cognitive
of patients, across more diverse speech
on AI language models, that
maps’. They find support for this theory
setting, to test whether it might prove
in a second part of the same study
useful in the clinic.
can characterise subtle signatures in the speech of patients diagnosed with schizophrenia. The research, published in PNAS, aims to understand how the automated
where the authors used brain scanning to measure brain activity in parts of the
Dr Nour said: “We are entering a very
brain involved in learning and storing
exciting time in neuroscience and mental
these ‘cognitive maps’.
health research. By combining state-ofthe-art AI language models and brain
Lead author, Dr Matthew Nour (UCL
scanning technology, we are beginning
Queen Square Institute of Neurology
to uncover how meaning is constructed
psychiatric conditions.
and University of Oxford), said: “Until
in the brain, and how this might go
very recently, the automatic analysis
awry in psychiatric disorders. There is
Currently, psychiatric diagnosis is based
of language has been out of reach of
enormous interest in using AI language
doctors and scientists. However, with
models in medicine. If these tools prove
the advent of artificial intelligence (AI)
safe and robust, I expect they will begin
language models such as ChatGPT, this
to be deployed in the clinic within the
and brain scans.
situation is changing.
next decade.”
However, this lack of precision prevents
“This work shows the potential of
The study was funded by Wellcome.
analysis of language could help doctors and scientists diagnose and assess
almost entirely on talking with patients and those close to them, with only a minimal role for tests such as blood tests
a richer understanding of the causes of mental illness, and the monitoring
applying AI language models to psychiatry - a medical field intimately
of treatment.
related to language and meaning.”
The researchers asked 26 participants
Schizophrenia is a debilitating and
with schizophrenia and 26 control participants to complete two verbal fluency tasks, where they were asked to name as many words as they could either belonging to the category “animals” or starting with the letter “p,” in five minutes.
common psychiatric disorder that affects around 24 million people worldwide and over 685,000 people in the UK. According to the NHS, symptoms of the condition may include hallucinations, delusions, confused thoughts and changes in behaviour.
To analyse the answers given by participants, the team used an AI language model that had been trained on vast amounts of internet text to represent the meaning of words in a similar way to humans. They tested whether the words people spontaneously recalled could be predicted by the AI model, and whether this predictability was reduced in patients with schizophrenia. They found that the answers given by control participants were indeed more predictable by the AI model than those generated by people with schizophrenia, and that this difference was largest in patients with more severe symptoms. The researchers think that this difference might have to do with
47
Reference: 1. Matthew M. Nour, Daniel C. McNamee, Yunzhe Liu, Raymond J. Dolan. Trajectories through semantic spaces in schizophrenia and the relationship to ripple bursts. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2023; 120 (42) DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2305290120 2. University College London. “AI language models could help diagnose schizophrenia.” ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 9 October 2023. www.sciencedaily.com/ releases/2023/10/231009191615.htm
A pilot program aimed at female physicians was expanded to a national level with significant results in all aspects of burnout A pilot program that successfully reduced burnout among female medical residents has shown even greater results on a national level, according to researchers at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus. The study was published today in the journal JAMA Network Open.
“We did a pilot program in 2021 to see if it would work and it did,” said study co-author Tyra Fainstad, MD, associate professor at the University of Colorado School of Medicine. “Then we expanded it to 26 graduate medical institutions in 19 states. There were 1,017 participants. We saw significant improvement in every wellbeing outcome we assessed including all three subscales involved in burnout.”
Burnout within the health care community is a national epidemic disproportionally affecting women. Last year, the U.S. Surgeon General declared it a `crisis’ deserving ‘bold, fundamental change’ though little was known about scalable, effective solutions to the problem.
Women are hit harder by burnout for reasons that include bias and sexism at work, pay disparities as well as a disproportionate burden of home management and child/elder care,
15
the researchers said.
Fainstad and co-author Adrienne Mann, MD, both faculty in the CU Department of Medicine, created the web-based Better Together Physician Coaching Program at CU Anschutz with the goal of reducing
Coaching program reduces burnout in medical residents
that burnout. Then they replicated it to a national level and published their findings. While the pilot program saw improvements in `imposter syndrome’ (feeling as if you don’t really belong in the
48
job’) and self-compassion, the expanded
(PA), beliefs around competence
system, working with individuals who
national study also showed significant
and success at work.
have been harmed along the way will be
improvements in outcomes across the board including moral injury and flourishing, offering actual evidence that the program works.
imperative to healing.” The EE score is a key construct in health care related burnout. A one point increase in the EE scale has been associated with a 7% increase in suicidal
“Physician trainees who received online
ideation and a 5-6% increase in major
group coaching over four months
medical errors.
(burnout, moral injury and imposter syndrome) and improvements in well-being (self-compassion and flourishing),” said Mann.
healing the culture would be making coaching programs like Better Together accessible to everyone - not necessarily mandatory but at least made available by institutions.
had substantial reductions in multiple dimensions of professional distress
Mann suggested a step towards
The researchers said a reduced mean
“There are other coaching programs
EE score among those that took part
in this space but this one is rigorously
in the training and an increased
evidence-based. We studied it,” Mann
EE score in those that did not.
said. “There are no downsides. It helps in all aspects of burnout.”
Mann and Fainstad are both certified life
“From what we see in this study,
coaches. Better Together is owned and
coaching helps in every aspect of
operated by the University of Colorado.
burnout,” Fainstad said. “The multi-modal
It’s not a business, they said, and they
nature of our program is unique. You
don’t personally profit financially from
can interact in many ways. That partially
it. The program is available to any heath
explains the powerful impact -that
care institution, school of medicine,
and the group nature of our coaching.”
department, or residency program wishing to meaningfully support the wellbeing of their clinicians and trainees. Better Together is web-based.
Mann said the majority are watching others being coached and share in the experience.
Participants take part in two videoconferencing coaching calls
“That is deeply connecting. They try
per week where up to five people can
to see themselves in someone else’s
be coached live on any topic with an
story,” she said. “When someone is on a
unlimited audience. Calls are recorded
view screen you have compassion and
for later listening on a private podcast.
empathy for them and, by extension, learn to practice compassion and
Participants can also access unlimited,
empathy for yourself.”
anonymous written coaching in a forum by submitting a narrative reflection and
While few strategies to address burnout
receive a coach’s response published to
have shown much overall effect, Fainstad
Better Together’s secure, members-only
said this study demonstrates that group
website. There are also weekly self-study
coaching works.
sessions using videos and worksheets. They focus on topics pertinent to the physician lifestyle such as goal setting, cultivating a growth mindset, receiving critical feedback, imposter syndrome
“We’re now showing that we have an actual evidence-based answer to burnout,” she said.
and perfectionism. Fainstad and Mann said burnout The researchers use the Maslach Burnout
is a product of the current, often toxic,
Inventory (MBI) to measure their work.
medical culture pervading every
The MBI has three subscales: emotional
aspect of the profession.
exhaustion (EE) or feeling emotionally
“Culture is a belief system,” Fainstad
exhausted from work; Depersonalization
said. “And while structural changes are
(DP), detached and impersonal treatment
absolutely necessary to fix our medical
of patients; Professional accomplishment
49
References: 1. Adrienne Mann, Ami N. Shah, Pari Shah Thibodeau, Liselotte Dyrbye, Adnan Syed, Maria A. Woodward, Kerri Thurmon, Christine D. Jones, Kimiko S. Dunbar, Tyra Fainstad. Online Well-Being Group Coaching Program for Women Physician Trainees. JAMA Network Open, 2023; 6 (10): e2335541 DOI: 10.1001/ jamanetworkopen.2023.35541 2. University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus. “Coaching program reduces burnout in medical residents.” ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 4 October 2023. www.sciencedaily.com/ releases/2023/10/231004132427.htm
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