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Frost & Sullivan: Mobile Health may be the Answer for Australia, but is Australia ready?

~Mobile health can be an effective tool to address Australia's healthcare challenges, however, adoption is fraught with obstacles and continues to be skewed towards consumer-ended offerings
Frost & Sullivan
2015-07-29 16:47 2272

SYDNEY, July 29, 2015 /PRNewswire/ -- In spite of the tremendous development of hospital infrastructure, Australia currently only has about 4 beds per thousand and a medical workforce of approximately 70,000 working clinicians. A key issue in Australian healthcare is access to timely and quality care, a problem that can potentially be addressed by enhancing and improving communication between providers and patients using mobile health (mHealth).

Shalani Andria, Industry Analyst, Connected Health, Asia-Pacific, Frost & Sullivan
Shalani Andria, Industry Analyst, Connected Health, Asia-Pacific, Frost & Sullivan

Frost & Sullivan estimates almost 15,000,000 Australians are connected through a smartphone. The increased rate of smartphone penetration among healthcare professionals, coupled with the Australian government initiatives are factors driving mHealth growth in Australia.

Frost & Sullivan's new research, Analysis of Mobile Health (mHealth) Market in Australia, finds that the market was worth US$1.4 billion in 2014. It is estimated to rise to US$2.18 billion in 2019 at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 9.3 percent during this period. The study covers clinical and non-clinical segments mHealth apps and services, but not devices.

Healthcare providers in Australia are focusing on integrating care across various points of service to more comprehensively understand health problems at both an individual and a population level. Thus, the next generation healthcare delivery system in the country is expected to bring care to homes and provide a more patient centric approach that requires a high level of patient engagement in the continuum of care. The emerging out-of-hospital-setting-care trend and the increase of smartphone use among clinicians and patients show signs of mHealth propelling in Australia in the near future and bringing care delivery system to a whole new level.

Shalani Andria, Connected Health Industry analyst at Frost & Sullivan says healthcare providers and mHealth companies believe mHealth can play a vital role in the Australian healthcare system and envision mobile technologies to play a far more important role than even improving healthcare access. mHealth not only improves information access across various stakeholders, it also encourages the information holder to manage and take action upon the data. This improves patient engagement and makes consumers more actively involved in managing their health, and has been a key driver for mHealth adoption amongst consumers. While it helps increase patients' participation in the care delivery system, it also has the benefit of potentially promoting healthy behaviours in the population.

Much like most evolving markets, in Australia, mHealth is still at its infant stage, and its full potential in addressing some of the major care delivery challenges is yet to be realised. Consumers are leveraging mHealth apps and related data-analytics services mainly for activity monitoring, wellness and fitness purposes. There is some evidence of chronic disease management programs using mHealth both in the public and private sector but these are still in pilot phases.

Clinical use of mHealth continues to be fraught with challenges in adoption. The greatest concern is about the management of mHealth generated data because there are still gaps in regulations governing data ownership and privacy. Moreover, physicians tend to question some of the claims made by mHealth companies and need a federal stamp before they consider clinical uses. In the absence of proven clinical applications, mHealth vendors find it challenging to design a sustainable business model because the big question of who pays for the offering remains unanswered.

"In the healthcare industry, clinicians' adoption to a new care delivery system is crucial, in the absence of which, the market will have a tendency to move towards commoditisation," explains Andria. "For mHealth in Australia, data security and usage needs to be addressed at the earliest in order to drive market development."

Mobile communication is no longer a toy for the gadget-geeks, it has become an integral part of our daily lives and supports all aspects of human life from enabling communication, procuring food and goods to conducting business. Rapid penetration of mobile communications is revolutionising all industries in Australia including banking, retail and healthcare.

Analysis of Mobile Health (mHealth) Market in Australia is part of the Connected Health P8B5-48 (http://www.connectedhealth.frost.com) Growth Partnership Service program. Frost & Sullivan's related studies include:

Asia-Pacific Healthcare Industry Outlook, May 2015
Analysis of The Telemedicine Market in Asia-Pacific, July 2015
Pulse of Telehealth, Sep 2014
Asia-Pacific Hospital Outlook 2014, Apr 2015

All studies included in subscriptions provide detailed market opportunities and industry trends evaluated following extensive interviews with market participants.

Analysis of the Mobile Health (mHealth) Market in Australia
P8B5-48

About Frost & Sullivan

Frost & Sullivan, the Growth Partnership Company, works in collaboration with clients to leverage visionary innovation that addresses the global challenges and related growth opportunities that will make or break today's market participants. For more than 50 years, we have been developing growth strategies for the global 1000, emerging businesses, the public sector and the investment community. Is your organization prepared for the next profound wave of industry convergence, disruptive technologies, increasing competitive intensity, Mega Trends, breakthrough best practices, changing customer dynamics and emerging economies? Contact us: Start the discussion

Media Contact:

Donna Jeremiah
Corporate Communications - Asia Pacific
P: +612 82478927
F: +612 92528066
E: djeremiah@frost.com

http://www.frost.com

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Source: Frost & Sullivan
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