Global
Telehealth Market Set to Exceed $1 Billion by 2016
Date: 15 September 2011
Date: 15 September 2011
The
world market for Telehealth is set to exceed $1 billion by 2016 and could jump
to $6 billion in 2020, according to a new report, “The World Market for Telehealth – A Quantitative Market
Assessment – 2011 Edition,” by InMedica, the medical electronics
market research group within IMS Research, the leading independent provider of
market research and consultancy to the global electronics industry.
“Many
public healthcare systems now have targets to reduce both the number of
hospital visits and the length of stay in hospital,” says Diane Wilkinson,
Research Manager at InMedica. “This has led to a growing trend for healthcare
to be managed outside the traditional hospital environment, and as a result,
there is a growing trend for patients to be monitored in their home environment
using Telehealth technologies once their treatment is complete.”
Home-monitoring
is becoming increasingly relevant in the treatment of chronic diseases. For
example, home monitoring of blood-pressure allows sufferers of hypertension to
manage their condition better and monitor their progress. Home-use medical
devices in Teleheatlh services, such as blood glucose meters, pulse oximeters,
weight scales and peak flow meters are being deployed to monitor four main
diseases – congestive heart failure (CHF), chronic obstructive pulmonary
disease (COPD), diabetes and hypertension.
“By
far the most established market for telehealth at present is the US, as
evidenced by The Veteran’s Health Administration’s extensive home Telehealth
service, which aims to have 92,000 patients enrolled on Telehealth services by
2012” Wilkinson adds. “There has also been some large-scale trial activity in
Europe, most notably in the UK in 2010 and 2011, where PCTs have initiated some
projects involving more than 2,000 patients”.
“What
is apparent is the convergence of many different industries in this space,
including Telehealth companies, device manufacturers, healthcare agencies,
service providers and telecommunication companies to name but a few. With such
interest from a wide range of investors and the need to minimize healthcare
expenditure globally while managing the chronic disease epidemic, there is
obvious motivation for the full acceptance of Telehealth from governments, physicians
and patients alike.”
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