Juniper Research has released its report, ‘Mobile Healthcare Opportunities: Monitoring, Applications & mHealth Strategies 2010-2014’. The report forecasts that revenues from remote patient monitoring using mobile networks will rise to almost $1.9 billion (£1.2 billion) globally by 2014, with heart-based monitoring in the US accounting for the bulk of early mobile monitoring roll-outs. But while mobile monitoring will contribute to healthcare cost savings in developed markets, the study finds that national wealth and the structure of the healthcare market in a given geographical region will have an important bearing on the extent to which it is rolled out.
The report also finds that the market for mobile health and fitness applications will thrive, and eventually spawn a new market for advanced apps which integrate sensors worn on the body. The report provides detailed analysis of the evolution of Smartphone apps, and the impact of the app store model on the healthcare industry.
The report provides five year forecasts for public sector savings attributable to mHealth monitoring, as well the number of health monitoring events per year, and service revenue from health monitoring. Other key forecasts include revenue and user forecasts from fitness and healthcare apps, as well as the number of users that downloaded lifestyle and healthcare apps.
The report assesses how much the public healthcare sector could save through cellular remote monitoring of individuals; what the future holds for mobile healthcare applications; which operators have the most progressive outlook towards the mHealth sector; and which regions will show substantial growth in mobile health monitoring revenues.
There’s more information about the report here.
The report also finds that the market for mobile health and fitness applications will thrive, and eventually spawn a new market for advanced apps which integrate sensors worn on the body. The report provides detailed analysis of the evolution of Smartphone apps, and the impact of the app store model on the healthcare industry.
The report provides five year forecasts for public sector savings attributable to mHealth monitoring, as well the number of health monitoring events per year, and service revenue from health monitoring. Other key forecasts include revenue and user forecasts from fitness and healthcare apps, as well as the number of users that downloaded lifestyle and healthcare apps.
The report assesses how much the public healthcare sector could save through cellular remote monitoring of individuals; what the future holds for mobile healthcare applications; which operators have the most progressive outlook towards the mHealth sector; and which regions will show substantial growth in mobile health monitoring revenues.
There’s more information about the report here.
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