GE PowerPoint Template
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To be, or well be, II
Teknologiat osana
palveluprosessin muutosta
Jaana Tuominen, GE Healthcare
GE Healthcare
GE Healthcare: A Unique Collection
of Expertise…
Technologies
Bio-Sciences
Information Technology
Imaging and Intervention
Molecular Diagnostics
Pharmaceutical Solutions
…creating advanced diagnostics
3 /GE
Need a fundamental change …
Cancer
Heart Disease
Brain Disorders
One person in three
will have cancer
50% die after 1st
heart attack
20% aged 75-84 suffer from
Alzheimer’s disease
4 /GE
A new age of medicine
21st Century Personalized Healthcare
Predict
Diagnose
Inform
Treat
5 /GE
If we can detect it here,
it may never appear here.
6 /GE
Predict
See the future.
Change the future.
Molecular understanding of
diseases
A new generation of
diagnostics
Identify the “genetic
fingerprints” of disease
Predict disease before the
onset
7 /GE
Diagnose
The earlier you detect
disease,
the earlier you can deal with it.
Transformational medical
imaging and medical
diagnostics
Visualize and analyze disease
at a molecular level
Diagnose disease more
precisely – based on the
individual patient
Improve patient outcomes
8 /GE
Inform
Enable better care through
molecular knowledge.
Provide life-critical patient
information – when, where
and how it’s needed
Empower through information
about “genetic signatures”
Tailor treatment to the patient
Monitor and manage the
efficacy of personalized
therapy
9 /GE
Treat
Read the genes.
Tailor the treatment.
Understand disease at a
molecular level
Develop more targeted and
effective therapies
Enable the development of
new, more targeted drugs…
faster
10 /GE
GE Healthcare Vision
At GE Healthcare, We Strive
to See Life More Clearly
We Help Predict, Diagnose,
Inform and Treat So That
Every Individual Can Live
Life to the Fullest
11 /GE
The Emerging Era of Chronic Disease
Response Needed for a New Era
1900-1950 Era of Infectious Disease Care
1950-2000 Era of Acute Care
2000-2050 Era of Chronic Care
Era of Chronic Care requires collection and
management of patient medical information
outside of the traditional hospital setting.
13 /GE
Population Managing Multiple
Diseases
Medical progress often turns an acute condition into a chronic one. Ex:
40% decline in mortality from coronary heart disease since 1980, but
more people are living with survival effects. A chronic condition lasts
more than one year, limits a patient’s abilities and requires ongoing
care. Chronic conditions include:
• Cardiovascular disease
• Arthritis
• Diabetes
• Some types of cancers
• Hypertension
• Asthma
• End-stage renal disease
(ESRD)
• Neurodegenerative
disorders (Alzheimer’s,
Parkinson’s, etc.)
• Chronic obstructive
pulmonary disease (COPD)
• Osteoporosis
• Chronic pain
• Stroke and other brain
injuries
14 /GE
Chronic Health Impact
Pending Dr. & RN Shortage
US Supply & Demand for Registered Nurses
Demand
Millions of Patients
2.9
2.7
Rising Costs of Healthcare
Patients With Chronic Conditions Account For:
Emergency
Room Visits
55%
Physician Visits
2.5
2.3
66%
Home Care
Visits
2.1
1.9
Supply
1.7
1.5
96%
Inpatient
Admits
60%
Hospital Stays
80%
2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 2018 2020
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
Quality of Care Dilemma
Medicare Expenditures
Per # of Chronic Conditions
$12 973
• Medicare Insolvency by 2019
• Direct Costs $510 Billion, to $1.07 Trillion, 2020
• 80% of Healthcare Costs on 20% of Population
$4 701
$2 394
$211
None
Tw o
Three
• 60 Million Americans with 1 Chronic Disease
• 157 Million Americans with 1 by 2020
Four
• Chronic consuming 70% of Prescription Drugs
15 /GE
Ambulatory Care – to address
chronic diseases
Ambulatory Care
Address Key
Disease States…
Ambulatory Monitoring…
Enables early intervention
Improves patient outcomes
Reduces hospitalization costs
Chronic patient,
managed at
home
Congestive Heart Failure
Increases Cost Savings
Increases patient compliance
+
Improves provider productivity
Improves quality of life
Asthma and COPD
MSU Telehealth Case Study:
Ambulatory Monitoring Solution reduced…
Ambulatory
diagnostic device
+ connection to
physician & EMR
Therapeutic dose
monitoring
Total Bed Utilization
55%
CHF Patient Hospital Utilization
43%
Urgent Care Visits
35%
17 /GE
Market Drivers
• Aging population
• Acute conditions chronic conditions
Acute intervention managed care
• Increasing patient consumerism - “Worried well”
• Need for cost reductions in healthcare systems
• Changes in reimbursement to encourage
outpatient care
• Improvement in communications access
(Source: F&S 2004 US RPM)
www.cybernetmedical.com
www.medscape.com
18 /GE
Market Restraints
• High cost and inflexibility of products
• Limited scope of reimbursement
• Documentation of outcomes
• Legal issues (e.g. state licensure issues)
• Lack of standardization of clinical protocols
• Privacy concerns
• Tight budgets with home health care
• Lack of physician acceptance
(Source: F&S 2004 US RPM)
www.cybernetmedical.com
www.medscape.com
19 /GE
Product Needs
• Low cost
Key CHF Parameters…
•Weight
•Blood Pressure
•SPO2
•Drug Compliance
•ECG
•Activity Level
•Heart Rhythm
•Nutrition/Diet
• Flexibility
• Ease of Use (single button,
voice prompts)
• Unbreakable
• Designed for home
environment
• Communications
requirements
20 /GE
Remote Patient Monitoring Overview
Physician
Configured
Patient
Alertee (e.g., FNP)
Data
Home hub
Data alert
Results
Central platform
Data
EMR/
Patient
dashboard Professional
caregivers
Algorithm
PC/TV
Data
Sensing
• Non-invasive
sensors
• Novel
Parameters
• Drug Compliance
Network / Data
Pre-prosessing
• Smart alerts
• Wireless platform
Data management
Information
interface
•Novel
•Configurable
algorithms,
Alerts
modeling
•EMR Integration
• Information portal •Existing
•Patient Access
• Telecommunication algorithms
•Decision Support
Non-professional
caregivers
Customer interface
•Patient Triage
•Educate Patient
•Engage Family
21 /GE
Remote monitoring and viewing –
opportunities in the near future
The story of Joe Doe
14:32:23
Telemetry patient John Doe is
going to have a cup of coffee in
the hospital cafeteria.
14:32:28
RN M. Smith receives the ‘ST high’
alarm in her PDA. She checks the
snapshot, acknowledges the
message and hurries to the patient.
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14:33:32
After examination she decides to
consult Dr. S. Jones who is the
physician in charge of John Doe.
14:33:55
The message shows the snapshot and RN Smith’s
request for advice
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14:35:12
After looking at the John Doe’s
snapshot and real-time and trended
data, Dr. Jones gives care instructions
to RN Smith
14:36:38
RN Smith makes the lab test order
electronically with her PDA
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15:17:09
The lab results are ready and they are
sent to Dr. Jones automatically by the
system
15:17:09
Dr. Jones makes the drug order with his
PDA, and sends it to RN Smith
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15:21:17
RN Smith receives the drug
order and administers the drug
in John Doe’s IV bag
15:22:50
RN Smith documents the drug
treatment utilizing the bar code
scanner that is built-in her PDA
27 /GE
29 /GE