| Literature DB >> 32638001 |
Abstract
mHealth, the use of mobile and wireless technologies in healthcare, and mHealth apps, a subgroup of mHealth, are expected to result in more person-focussed healthcare. These technologies are predicted to make patients more motivated in their own healthcare, reducing the need for intensive medical intervention. Thus, mHealth app technology might lead to a redesign of existing healthcare architecture making the system more efficient, sustainable, and less expensive. As a disruptive innovation, it might destabilise the existing healthcare organisation through a changed role for healthcare professionals with patients accessing care remotely or online. This account coincides with the broader narrative of National Health Service policy-makers, which focusses on personalised healthcare and greater patient responsibility with the potential for significant cost reductions. The article proposes that while the concept of mHealth apps as a disruptive technology and the narrative of personalisation and responsibilisation might support a transformation of the healthcare system and a reduction of costs, both are dependent on patient trust in the safety and security of the new technology. Forcing trust in this field may only be achieved with the application of traditional and other regulatory mechanisms and with this comes the risk of reducing the effect of the technology's disruptive potential.Entities:
Keywords: Disruptive innovation; Health apps; Patient self-management; Safety and security regulation; Transformation of existing healthcare architecture; Trust
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32638001 DOI: 10.1093/medlaw/fwaa019
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Law Rev ISSN: 0967-0742 Impact factor: 1.267