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Freitag, 29.03.2024
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The linkage between information and computer technologies inspired new hopes — and fears.

Since computer technology can nowadays find you the best restaurant or the quickest route home, keep you in touch with friends around the globe, and help you in a job search, it seems common logic that it should become a routine part of the health care scene, too.

Though only up to a point, as it turns out. The logic is impeccable. The logistics are less evident.

At its simplest, if your app directs you to a bad restaurant, or chooses the wrong route, the worst outcome may be no more than mild indigestion or a few minutes delay. But it’s not the same with a metering app that is supposed to warn a diabetic of dangerous glucose levels or advise remedial action for someone with a heart condition. If digital technology slips up on measuring a vital sign or transmitting critical symptoms, the consequences may be grave — in every sense of the word.

These questions have acquired new urgency as the technological possibilities increase. While computers have been playing a role in health care for decades, it is ICT, the ever-closer linkage between information and computer technologies, that has inspired new hopes — and fears.

No longer is it just hospitals digitizing their patient records, physicians peering inside the body with scanning equipment, clinical laboratories automating their analysis of samples, or drug developers accelerating the screening and modeling of potential treatments. There has been a dramatic expansion of ICT’s capacities for gathering and exploiting individuals’ health-related data, as costs decrease, handling is easier and access to technology becomes commonplace. The new potential of digital health care is simultaneously hailed as the salvation of hard-pressed health systems and reviled as a dangerous intrusion of Big Brother into citizens’ most intimate details.

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Autor(en)/Author(s): Peter O’Donnell

Quelle/Source: Politico,

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