Hi <strong>TAO listserv</strong>,Your friend, <strong>Catherine
Britain</strong>,
has recommended this article entitled '<strong>Halamka: Google Glass could
be
the new iPad for doctors</strong>' to you.<strong>Here is his/her
remark:</strong>Unfortunately
the Mobihealthnews Q1 2014 report was sent instead of this article.
My apologies. This is the article I wanted you to see.
Cathy<strong>Halamka: Google Glass could be the new iPad for
doctors</strong>Posted
By Jonah Comstock On April 14, 2014 (1:45 pm) In <a
href="http://x.jmxded26.net/y.z?l=http%3a%2f%2fmobihealthnews.com%2fcategory%2funcategorized%2f&r=3918849182&d=168975&p=1&t=h"
title="View all posts in Uncategorized" rel="category
tag">Uncategorized</a><p><a
href="http://x.jmxded26.net/y.z?l=https%3a%2f%2fwww.youtube.com%2fwatch%3fv%3djnEdaslPtEg&r=3918849182&d=168975&p=1&t=h"><img
class="alignright wp-image-32040" alt="glass screenshot"
src="http://mobihealthnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/glass-screenshot.jpg"
width="358" height="218" /></a>Beth Israel Deaconess Hospital has begun
working
with a startup called <a
href="http://x.jmxded26.net/y.z?l=http%3a%2f%2fwearableintelligence.com%2f&r=3918849182&d=168975&p=1&t=h"><strong>Wearable
Intelligence</strong></a> to deploy Google Glass in the emergency
department.
The hospital has four Glass devices shared among 10 emergency department
physicians,
including CIO John Halamka, who thinks Glass has the potential to, in some
ways,
be the new iPad.</p>
<p>“So I said a couple of years ago, if you had a tablet computer with
a
12 hour battery life, that can be dropped several feet without damage and
can
be disinfected, you’d actually have the ideal clinician
device,”
he told MobiHealthNews. “The iPad is good, but a little large. The
iPad
mini fits in a lab coat pocket, so really close. For procedure oriented
specialists
though, having something you wear is even better than something in a lab
coat
pocket, because it’s awkward to say ‘I see you’re having
a
heart attack, let me just go look at my mobile device and I’ll get
back
to you.’ It just doesn’t work to reach into a pocket or turn
away
from the patient to go get that data.”</p>
<p>Practically, Halamka doesn’t think the tablet is going away, as,
for
now, Glass is not a great tool for data entry. But he does expect the
desktop
computer to be largely replaced by a combination of smartphones, tablets,
and
wearable computers in the next few years. <!--more--></p>
<p>“I don’t have any copies of Windows 8 in the enterprise,
because
I think by the time Windows 7 stops being supported, the desktop
won’t
exist as a platform,” he said.</p>
<p>To address HIPAA and FDA concerns, Beth Israel uses Glass as a client to
display
information that’s stored on the hospital server — something
slightly
easier for Beth Israel, because it has an in-house EHR that made
integration
easier. There are three authentication safeguards for the devices, which
are
also kept at the hospital in a locked safe. First, they don’t work at
all
outside of the hospital’s secure WiFi. Second, when the physician
puts
on the Glass, he or she has to scan a personal QR code in order to access
any
data. Finally, to access patient data, physicians must scan a second QR
code
on the wall of the patient’s room. According to Halamka, using QR
codes
makes the user experience both secure and efficient.</p>
<p>“Literally, all I do is look at the door of the room as I’m
walking
into the room and the app immediately changes context and shows me the
information
about the patient I’m about to see,” said Halamka.
“There’s
zero extra steps. I don’t say ‘OK, Google
Glass’.”</p>
<p>The software allows physicians to access at a glance information about
existing
conditions, medications, and allergies. They can also use voice recognition
to
send secure messages to colleagues in the hospital. <a
href="http://x.jmxded26.net/y.z?l=http%3a%2f%2fgeekdoctor.blogspot.com%2f&r=3918849182&d=168975&p=1&t=h"><strong>On
his blog</strong></a>, Halamka shared a story about using the
technology.</p>
<p>“For example, I was paged emergently to one of our resuscitation
bays
to take care of a patient who was having a massive brain bleed,” he
wrote.
“One of the management priorities for brain bleeds is to quickly
control
blood pressure to slow down progression of the bleed. All he could tell us
was
that he had severe allergic reactions to blood pressure medications, but
couldn’t
remember their names, but that it was all in the computer. Unfortunately,
this
scenario is not unusual. Patients in extremis are often unable to provide
information
as they normally would. We must often assess and mitigate life threats
before
having fully reviewed a patient’s previous history. Google Glass enabled me
to
view this patient’s allergy information and current medication regimen
without
having to excuse myself to login to a computer, or even lose eye
contact.”</p>
<p>Halamka said a number of doctors from other hospitals have already
contacted
him asking for more information about the technology. He says the Wearable
Intelligence’s
set up should work for most hospital EHRs that have a web API, and that an
intuitive
user experience is the key to making the technology work.</p>
<p>In the future, Glass could have more use cases. <a
href="http://x.jmxded26.net/y.z?l=https%3a%2f%2fwww.youtube.com%2fwatch%3fv%3djnEdaslPtEg&r=3918849182&d=168975&p=2&t=h"><strong>A
video</strong></a> from Wearable Intelligence suggests it could also be
given
to EMTs, used to take photos and short videos of symptoms for the EHR, or
used
for teleconsultation, as is being done at <a
href="http://x.jmxded26.net/y.z?l=http%3a%2f%2fmobihealthnews.com%2f30855%2frhode-island-hospital-er-begins-google-glass-dermatology-study%2f&r=3918849182&d=168975&p=1&t=h"><strong>Rhode
Island Hospital</strong></a>. Even augmented reality, allowing surgeons to
see
medical imagery overlaid as they operate, is in the realm of
possibility.</p>
<p>“I’m a CIO with 20 years of experience, so you’ll never
get
me to say, ‘one technology will solve all problems for all
people’,”
Halamka said. “But wearable computing absolutely is a
workflow-enhancing
technology for procedure-oriented docs like emergency physicians,
cardiologists,
endoscopists, and surgeons. So, I actually expect we’re going to get
a
BYOG phenomenon. Bring Your Own Glass. I expect there will be a number of
docs
who decide Google Glass is their client of choice, and we’ll be there
with
the server tools to support it.”
<p style="text-align:right"></p>
Article taken from mobihealthnews - <a
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to article: <a
href="http://x.jmxded26.net/y.z?l=http%3a%2f%2fmobihealthnews.com%2f32035%2fhalamka-google-glass-could-be-the-new-ipad-for-doctors%2f&r=3918849182&d=168975&p=1&t=h">http://mobihealthnews.com/32035/halamka-google-glass-could-be-the-new-ipad-for-doctors/</a>
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