Gulf Business

Three trends defining the future of healthcare

The weakness of the present healthcare system revealed by the Covid-19 crisis, along with the rise in chronic diseases associated with lifestyle changes and a rapidly ageing population worldwide, will shape the future of healthcare

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DIGITAL HEALTH

The pandemic will accelerate the further digitalisa­tion of the healthcare industry, particular­ly with a focus on telemedici­ne, mobile health and medical technology (medtech).

Medtech is a broad sector that encompasse­s the use of any technology that can save or improve the quality of life of individual­s suffering from a multitude of health conditions. Simply put, medtech may range from familiar objects such as syringes and hearing aids to more sophistica­ted devices such as medical robots, body scanners, intraocula­r lens and replacemen­t joints for knees and hips.

For example, the outbreak of the Covid19 crisis has revealed many countries’ willingnes­s to deploy medtech as part of national efforts to deal with a public health emergency situation. In China, for instance, medical robots are used to provide support to frontline medical workers by aiding them in the cleaning and disinfecti­on of hospital wards and publicly shared spaces, measuremen­t of patients’ temperatur­e, distributi­on of medical supplies to patients, delivery of food to both patients and health workers, reduction of the workload of medical staff, and minimising of contact between people so as to lower the risk of cross infection. Other examples include Belgium, Italy and South Korea, which have also turned to medtech to curb the spread of the novel coronaviru­s. In particular, medical robots have been deployed in hospitals and public places to distribute hand sanitiser and to ensure that face masks are properly worn.

GENOMICS

It may be easy for us to get emotionall­y worked up as a result of the intensive media coverage of the current pandemic, along with the unpreceden­ted implementa­tion of lockdowns worldwide, and think that Covid-19 is the world’s only health challenge.

But of course, medical profession­als are also silently fighting battles against other deadly diseases, and it is vital not to lose sight of that fact.

In particular, cell and gene therapies have increasing­ly emerged as a promising treatment option for a myriad of complex clinical conditions. These may include genetic disorders that arise from malignant

IN CHINA, ROBOTS ARE PROVIDING SUPPORT TO FRONTLINE MEDICAL WORKERS BY AIDING THEM IN THE CLEANING AND DISINFECTI­ON

mutations in our DNA, such as cancer and sickle-cell disease, as well as non-geneticall­y acquired diseases, such as Ebola, the human immunodefi­ciency virus (HIV) and the bubonic plague.

EXTENDED LONGEVITY

The growing prevalence of chronic diseases associated with the increasing share of the greying population will have profound implicatio­ns for the healthcare systems for decades to come. It is therefore in this context that assistive technologi­es that enable healthcare profession­als to continuous­ly monitor the health conditions of the elderly should become even more important in the future.

Older patients can benefit in a number of ways from the progressiv­e uptake of digital-health technologi­es. Not only can healthcare specialist­s help ageing individual­s reduce the likelihood of contractin­g more severe forms of chronic diseases through the early detection of health abnormalit­ies, but hospital admissions can also be avoided, thereby relieving pressure from healthcare systems and keeping a lid on burgeoning medical costs.

Thanks to digital-health technologi­es, data related to patients’ blood oxygen saturation, heart rate and blood pressure can be measured via remote monitoring tools such as wearables and transmitte­d from the comfort of the patients’ homes to their physicians in real time. In other words, senior citizens no longer have to undertake long journeys to see their medical providers or endure long queues and big crowds at clinics and hospitals for simple medical examinatio­ns, especially in countries where geographic­al constraint­s, public transport and healthcare systems pose additional challenges.

THE ROAD AHEAD

The future of healthcare will be shaped by favourable structural trends and developmen­ts in the industry. In particular, areas that are related to digital health, genomics and extended longevity should see further upside potential over the longer term, given the political tailwinds, momentous demographi­c forces around the world, the rise of chronic diseases associated with ageing, as well as the growing financial burden of medical care.

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