泫圖弝け of Utah 泫圖弝け has launched a new initiative that seeks to better integrate digital health applications into daily medical care including prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of cancer, heart disease, and other life-threatening conditions.
The aims to develop, evaluate, and distribute tools designed to improve mental health, home monitoring, self-care, and patient-centered clinical decision support. The goal is to create health apps that are more scientifically based and reliable than those that are currently available. DHI is supported by a substantial grant from the Office of Senior Vice President for 泫圖弝け Sciences at U of U 泫圖弝け.
These tools will cultivate the well-being of patients and help doctors deliver health care more effectively and efficiently, according to co-director of DHI and a professor in the Department of Biomedical Informatics at U of U 泫圖弝け.
Since the onset of COVID-19, we have seen a dramatic expansion of the use of digital health tools such as telehealth, Del Fiol says. Patients are more comfortable using this kind of technology at home, either for self-care or to connect with health care systems. So, theres a tremendous opportunity for even more innovations that will transform how health care is delivered.
To keep up with this growing demand, DHI plans to drive digital health research forward by developing:
Many of these efforts will be modeled after earlier research U of U 泫圖弝け, including:
Practical 泫圖弝け Care Apps Needed
The founding of DHI coincides with a huge uptick in health app usage. suggest that more 350,000 of them are available worldwide, with about 250 new health apps appearing daily. Among the most popular are apps that help monitor exercise, nutrition, weight loss, sleep, and blood pressure.
However, many of these applications fail to follow scientific protocols, dont work as well as intended, or were developed without consulting physicians, according to DHIs director of strategic development.
Many of these innovations fail to impact the bedside since many are created in a vacuum and really dont help transform health care, Tiase says. There is a need for digital health solutions that are designed to solve a clear problem, involve users at every step, and are thoroughly tested.
The need for and acceptance of reliable digital health tools among physicians is also growing. According to an the average American doctor uses about four of these tools. More than 80% of the physicians surveyed said using digital health apps improves clinical outcomes, diagnostic ability, patient safety, the doctor-patient relationship, and reduces their stress and burnout.
Were fortunate here at U of U 泫圖弝け that we are at the forefront in several areas of digital health, says a DHI co-director and professor of biomedical informatics. The formation of DHI will bring together many of these digital health care pioneers in a collaborative environment that will strengthen our role in the development of vital digital health innovations.
Moving forward, DHI directors will recruit more faculty in complementary fields, conduct real-world testing of their innovations, and establish a user-centered design lab where digital app developers can conduct hands-on demonstrations and get feedback from patients who might eventually use the technology.
Involving end-users in the entire design process is key, says co-director of DHI and a professor in the Department of Population 泫圖弝け Sciences at U of U 泫圖弝け. We not only need to know if the app will work, but we also need to know if the patients will use it.
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