Dr. Bill Crounse—Microsoft's Senior Director, Worldwide Health—says that what we need most is a greater focus on policy and technology that actually makes things more simple.
Now that we’re well into 2015, I’m looking forward to all that the year ahead will deliver. Like you, I’m getting tired of reading prognostications about what’s hot and what's not for tech in the year ahead. However, I did enjoy a piece I came across recently by my blogosphere colleague and Forbes contributor, John Nosta.
Actually, I believe John published the post not recently, but rather a full year ago. The post, Digital Heath In 2014: The Imperative of Connectivity, might as well have been written this week—as it is just as true today as it was in January of 2014. In it, tech pundits from John Sculley to Steve Wozniak are quoted in musings about the tech revolution in health and healthcare and how everything you know is about to change.
As has been true for the past several years, people are predicting massive disruption and transformation of health and healthcare delivery fueled by technology. And, as has been the case during the vast majority of my 14-year career at Microsoft and many years before that as a physician, tech and healthcare industry executive, I feel like I’m still waiting for the big bang.
Now don’t get me wrong, we have certainly seen transformation (albeit slow) of healthcare, and technology is definitely driving a lot of that change. Policy is also driving change, perhaps more so than technology. And, at least in America, no policy is causing more disruption right now than that of the Affordable Care Act.
However, all of this begs the question—are things getting better or worse? People are paying more than ever before for the services they receive. Many of us are seeing our health insurance premiums rise while being asked to fork over more and more of our money toward copays and high deductibles (often $5000 to $12,000 per year per family). And even though I love technology, thus far I think it is failing to deliver on its promises or potential. Let me ask you, is it getting easier or harder to pay for and manage healthcare for your family? And if you are a healthcare provider, is it getting easier or harder to take care of your patients the way you’d like to care for them?
Technology should be making all of this easier and less expensive, but is it? Healthcare policy should be doing the same. Instead, we seem to be getting ever more complicated rules, regulations and business practices that confound both consumers and providers alike. Health insurance is more complicated than ever before, and don’t even get me started on Medicare.
If there is a theme I’d like policy makers, tech industry leaders, insurance chiefs, healthcare executives, and clinicians to focus more on in 2015 it would quite simply be……. simplicity.
We are making everything way too complicated. Without greater focus on technology that actually makes things more simple through seamless integration of services and information exchange, improved modalities for synchronous and asynchronous communication and collaboration in clinical workflow, and business models that truly support innovation and lower costs in healthcare—all the fancy new wearable smart devices, labs on a chip and augmented reality headsets won’t do much to save us from our misery.
I believe there are but a few global companies with the breadth, depth, and scale to really deliver on the kinds of information technology advances our health industry needs. Even then, it will take a carefully choreographed dance of enlightened public policy and innovation to deliver the goods. Otherwise, a year from now, and for many years yet to come, we’ll simply be singing Auld Lang Syne.
This article first appeared on MSDN’s Healthblog, and is reprinted with permission. For more expert insights from Dr. Crounse, follow him on Twitter @MicrosoftMD and on his Healthblog.
The nuviun blog is intended to contribute to discussion and stimulate debate on important issues in global digital health. The views are solely those of the author.
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