How Brazil is dealing with digital transformation challenges

How Brazil is dealing with digital transformation challenges
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Wednesday, July 1, 2020

 
 
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Former Rep. Patrick Kennedy, Pear, Shatterproof join forces on new addiction focused DTx coalition

By Laura Lovett

Photo by Jeff Schear/Getty Images for Kennedy Forum​​​​​​

Over the last decade, the addiction and mental health space has becoming increasingly digital – so much so that the first prescription digital therapeutic, Pear’s ReSET, scored FDA clearance nearly three years ago. While more and more players begin to join the so-called "DTx" space, the technology is yet to hit the mainstream radar, but a new coalition is looking to change that. 

A list of high-profile players in the addiction and recovery space, including Former Congressman Patrick Kennedy, D-R.I., 1995-2010, Pear Therapeutic, Shatterproof, and others in the space have come together to form the Recovery Access Coalition, which aims to advocate for access to prescription digital therapeutics. 

“The goal of any collation is to try to coalesce like-minded partners of stakeholders in achieving a common goal,” Kennedy, who also founded the mental health and addiction nonprofit Kennedy Forum, told MobiHealthNews. "In this case, the goal is to introduce the value of digital therapeutics to the outside world, because, if you haven’t been exposed to what they are all about, you have no appreciation for the value that they can bring to helping us treat many intractable chronic diseases.” 

The organization is looking to advocate for FDA-cleared digital therapeutics to be covered by Medicare on the federal level and Medicaid on the state level. Reimbursement has historically been a hurdle for digital health. But Kennedy argues that digital tools have the ability to demonstrate outcomes. 

“They have the ability of tracking the data in very measurable ways. So the value, in a world where payers loathe to reimburse for new therapies, these therapies have what the insurance world often complains about not having enough of – and that is evidence,” he said. 

This new coalition comes at a time when more and more healthcare providers are turning to digital, as a way to reach patients during the midst of a global pandemic. Kennedy said that, while the virus has put pressure on the need for digital, the need was there even before the coronavirus. 

“These technologies enjoy something that many mental health therapies have not enjoyed, because of the lack of scale or resources, and that is just by virtue of the fact that mental health and addiction research has really lagged behind all other research. But the value of digital therapeutics is that our clinical trials really cost very little in the type of instruction and financing necessary to bring validation to other therapies,” he said. 

Digital therapeutics geared towards treating mental health have enjoyed lax restrictions during the national state of emergency due to the coronavirus. In fact, Pear released its new product for treating schizophrenia during this time. However, these new loosened regulations are temporary. 

The organization is now trying to rally individuals to take steps to help expand access in the future. Namely, Kennedy said that it is urging people to email congress, email Medicaid and sign a petition supporting the tools. 

This isn’t the first organization centered on DTx. In fact, in 2017 the Digital Therapeutics Alliance (DTA) formed with some of the biggest names in the industry signing on, including Akili, Omada Health and Voluntis. 

However, this latest coalition has a narrower focus specifically looking at addiction. As these efforts progress, Kennedy said he’s looking to put his former political experience to work organizing these efforts. 

“Digital therapeutics is a tested, evidence-based therapy that can revolutionize the treatment of these illnesses,” Kennedy said. “This is about announcing a campaign. You know I am all about campaign … I’ve ran many campaigns in my own life. This is the way our democracy works, you need to organize, coalesce, build consensus and then get people to act, and that’s what Recovery Access Coalition helps us to do. 

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Lenovo unveils its take on remote chronic disease monitoring >>

By Dave Muoio

Computer hardware and technology company Lenovo today signaled its growing interest in digital health – or more specifically, in device-driven remote health monitoring.

In partnership with Tampa, Florida-based health software maker Vianova Health the Chinese company announced its Lenovo Virtual Care offering. Marketed to provider organizations, the multipart product is composed of Lenovo's devices, connected biometric-monitoring tools and an artificial intelligence-based virtual assistant.

Once prescribed and preconfigured, the take-home kit is designed to allow patients to begin following their personal care plans with minimal hassle, the company said in its announcement. Rosie, its built-in digital assistant, guides patients on how to use and transmit the data from their blood pressure cuffs, glucose monitors and other monitoring devices. Provider teams can review these live data to modify care regimens or more quickly deliver needed interventions.

The company says that Lenovo Virtual Care is appropriate for use in monitoring chronic conditions such as diabetes, COPD, congestive heart failure and hypertension. It is scheduled for U.S. launch in the third quarter.

WHY IT MATTERS

Between COVID-19 and the "hospital at home" movement that was picking up steam in the years prior, it should be little surprise that another major tech industry player is using its resources to transition care outside of the hospital.

To get there, it's leaning on a health software maker with a respectable resumé of partnerships and integrations (Vianova's website lists prior deals with Microsoft, AT&T, J&J, DrChrono, and Health Gorilla, to name a few). And according to the companies, Vianova's virtual-care technology has previously helped "one large healthcare institution" cut patient readmission by 18%.

“As the healthcare industry continues to explore new ways to deliver more cost-efficient and high-quality care outside of hospitals and doctors’ offices, we’re launching Lenovo Virtual Care to assist physicians and their teams in providing more personalized care to their patients,” Ed Gillispie, VP of North America public sector and healthcare for Lenovo, said in a statement. “With this new solution, Lenovo is empowering doctors to proactively manage chronic conditions, improve patient quality of life and reduce healthcare costs.”

THE LARGER TREND

Lenovo expects its remote-care product to work hand-in-hand with another recent digital health offering the company announced about a month and a half ago. Called Virtual Rounding, the service pairs a Lenovo tablet designed for use with Microsoft Teams to facilitate virtual video consultations between patients and providers. Further, the company offers a tools that support remote radiology and medical imaging readings.

But today's announcement isn't the first time that Lenovo has tackled virtual health assistants in the home. Back in early 2017 the company worked with healthcare voice tech startup Orbita on a voice-controlled speaker that provided guidance on chronic and post-acute care.

 

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HIMSS TV

How Brazil is dealing with digital transformation challenges

In this episode of The Alessi Agenda, Luis Gustavo Gasparini Kiatake, president of the Brazilian Health Informatics Association, discusses the challenges of data exchange, digital maturity and culture in the country's transformation journey.

 

HIMSS INSIGHTS

COVID-19 and Beyond

The latest issue in the HIMSS Insights series focuses on the implications of the coronavirus crisis for healthcare and healthcare digitization. Several months into the crisis at the time of publication, we try to identify major trends coming out of COVID-19 and unmet digital needs that are being unmasked. The second area of focus is digital health technology assessment which is arising in several healthcare systems and remains highly relevant during the pandemic and beyond.

 

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