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What is the future of digital health? And how will be the transition from doomed wearables to actual useful digital health devices?ย
As part of the series of guest posts named Thoughts Leadersโ Corner, here is a very interesting article from John Nosta,#1 Kred-ranked health influencer and in the top .01% of influencers in marketing, health, doctors and social media. I hope you will enjoy it and you are interested to the legal issues of digital health, check my blog post here!
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Yes. I did say nothing.
So, this is my take of the famous Seinfeld episode about nothing. ย And in this case it applies to digital health and the ubiquity of wearables. ย Itโs my point here that all this commotion over wearables is a bit much. ย Of course, it might be a necessary device to grow awareness, but I think the future of digital health is best captured with one wordโnothing.
Now, nothing doesnโt exactly mean nothing. ย Of course the evolution of technology will create a tsunami of stuffโfrom gadgets to dataโbut the magic will be when it all just goes away. ย And whatโs left is that magic of transparent technology that gets a step ahead of us and transforms our lives.
Start with WEARABLES
We all have then. ย Those huge, bulky devices that we (more often than not) forget to put on, charge and download. ย Personally, I hate them (well, again Iโm playing with language here.) ย Well, I really have more of a love / hate relationship with them. ย Wait. ย No, I hate them. ย The dirty secret is the, at least from my perspective, is that wearable compliance is not very good. ย And it might even mirror that non-compliance seen in those things we call pills.
Moveย to DERMALS
OK. ย Now we have a decal, temporary tattoo or some other โbody markโ that makes the wearable seem nothing more than funky jewelry. ย And thatโs still a cool place to be. ย But interesting new dermals will be used in long-term and short term scenarios. ย For example, the temporary dermal patch might be used to track body temperature (infection) when someone is treated with an antibiotic. ย And arenโt tattoos all the rage?
Swallow hard, itโs CONSUMABLES
Thanks ProteusHealthย and some of the other big thinkers out there. ย So, the future might just take us beyond sticking something on your skin. Nanotechnology will find its way into your body via a route that makes todayโs โimplantableโ seem almost horrific. ย I have to cancel that colonoscopy.
Then NOTHING. ย Just your life
Of course, wearables, dermals and consumables will have a place in our digital health armamentarium of the future. ย From cost considerations to practicality, my Fitbit and Basis might stay in vogueโlike my Rolex. ย But (like my Rolex) they wonโt keep the best time (or data). ย The future belongs to the sensor that you donโt notice. ย Itโs the sensor thatโs built into your life and not attached to it. ย Itโs the sensor thatโs build into your bathroom mirror that tracks your ECG with diagnostic accuracy. ย Itโs the sensor thatโs build into your toothbrush that looks for cavities and the potential for systemic bacterial contamination that begins in your mouth. ย Itโs the sensor that you stand on (build into your tile floor) that measures your weight and body fat. ย Itโs the sensor in your toilet that measures and tracks a host of body chemistriesโfrom glucose to blood. ย Itโs the sensor thatโs build into the steering wheel of your can that tracks blood sugar and pulse.
Itโs these sensors that you donโt even noticeโฆuntil the SENSOR wants you to.
The future of digital health my belong more to the companies like Kohler, KitchenAid and Ford. These companies now own less a product and more a room or experience. And as digital health searches for the place to belong, it will find unexpected companions and end up in places that we never imagined.
So, it started with this big idea around wearables. ย And yes, they are cool and even a bit fashionable. ย But they are doomed. ย And their loss can be the gain (and transformation) of digital health.
For more discussions around the topic, you can follow John Nosta on his LinkedIn and Twitter profiles and on Forbes. And if you want to contribute to the Thought Leadersโ Corner, here are the guidelines for guest posts.