Brave New Healthcare: A Narrative Review of Digital Healthcare in American Medicine.

Autor: Pergolizzi J Jr; Operations, NEMA Research, Inc., Naples, USA., LeQuang JAK; Healthcare Policy, NEMA Research, Inc., Naples, USA., Vasiliu-Feltes I; Business Administration, University of Miami, Miami, USA., Breve F; Department of Pharmacy, Temple University, Philadelphia, USA., Varrassi G; Pain Medicine, Paolo Procacci Foundation, Rome, ITA.
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: Cureus [Cureus] 2023 Oct 04; Vol. 15 (10), pp. e46489. Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 Oct 04 (Print Publication: 2023).
DOI: 10.7759/cureus.46489
Abstrakt: The digital revolution has had a profound effect on American and global healthcare, which was accelerated by the pandemic and telehealth applications. Digital health also includes popular and more esoteric forms of wearable monitoring systems and interscatter and other wireless technologies that facilitate their telemetry. The rise in artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML) may serve to improve interpretation from imaging technologies to electrocardiography or electroencephalographic tracings, and new ML techniques may allow these systems to scan data to discern and contextualize patterns that may have evaded human physicians. The necessity of virtual care during the pandemic has morphed into new treatment paradigms, which have gained patient acceptance but still raise issues with respect to privacy laws and credentialing. Augmented and virtual reality tools can facilitate surgical planning and "hands-on" clinical training activities. Patients are working with new frontiers in digital health in the form of "Dr. Google" and patient support websites to learn or share medical information. Patient-facing digital health information is both a blessing and curse, in that it can be a boon to health-literate patients who seek to be more active in their own care. On the other hand, digital health information can lead to false conclusions, catastrophizing, misunderstandings, and "cyberchondria." The role of blockchain, familiar from cryptocurrency, may play a role in future healthcare information and would serve as a disruptive, decentralizing, and potentially beneficial change. These important changes are both exciting and perplexing as clinicians and their patients learn to navigate this new system and how we address the questions it raises, such as medical privacy in a digital age. The goal of this review is to explore the vast range of digital health and how it may impact the healthcare system.
Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
(Copyright © 2023, Pergolizzi Jr. et al.)
Databáze: MEDLINE