Business a.m.

Digital therapeuti­cs revenue set to rise 610% to $8bn by 2026

- Stories by Onome Amuge

DIGITAL THERA PEUTICS, AS DE SCRIBED BY MED ICAL EXPERTS, ARE CLINICALLY VALIDATED SOFTWARE programmes for the treatment of chronic medical conditions, either independen­tly or in conjunctio­n with other therapies.

Now, according to new research by Juniper, a global hi-tech research and analytical services provider, digital therapeuti­cs facilitate the proactive mitigation of chronic medical conditions before they require costly interventi­ons, enabling health insurers to reduce long-term costs per patient.

The research titled, “Digital Therapeuti­cs & Wellness: Key Trends, Business Models & Market Forecasts 2022-2026”, found that digital therapeuti­cs revenue from health insurers will increase to $8 billion by 2026, up from $1.1 billion in 2022, representi­ng a growth of 610 percent over the next four years.

Juniper forecasts that the number of people using digital therapeuti­cs will increase by 381 percent over the next four years, adding that machine learning will be key to this growth by facilitati­ng advanced data analytics, remote patient monitoring, and real-time conversati­onal coaching.

The research also posited that insurers will benefit from an ongoing shift among digital therapeuti­cs vendors towards engagement-and results-based payments.

However, it highlighte­d that the insurance savings will be limited to health insurers in developed regions, where consumer devices and digitalise­d health infrastruc­ture are ubiquitous.

As such, it asserted that health insurers in Africa and Latin America will contribute less than two percent towards health insurerled digital therapeuti­cs revenue in 2026.

Juniper recommends that therapeuti­cs providers looking to leverage the digital therapeuti­c trend prioritise the developmen­t of performanc­e benchmarks, as demonstrat­ing improvemen­t and preventing patient abandonmen­t will become a direct monetary issue.

Describing the technologi­cal impact of digital therapeuti­cs in the health sector, Adam Wears, the research author, explained that as developers and healthcare providers increasing­ly grapple with issues of liability and malpractic­e, machine learning will transition from a patient-facing role to a diagnostic tool offered through provider-facing dashboards; to be used by clinicians and specialist­s in a manner akin to traditiona­l computer-aided diagnostic­s.

On the flipside, Juniper cautioned that an ongoing lack of standards surroundin­g the use of machine learning within digital therapeuti­cs will result in vendors limiting its role in their offerings.

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