Digital health: a path to validation
Johns Hopkins University · Johns Hopkins Medicine · +3 more institutions
Abstract
Digital health solutions continue to grow in both number and capabilities. Despite these advances, the confidence of the various stakeholders - from patients and clinicians to payers, industry and regulators - in medicine remains quite low. As a result, there is a need for objective, transparent, and standards-based evaluation of digital health products that can bring greater clarity to the digital health marketplace. We believe an approach that is guided by end-user requirements and formal assessment across technical, clinical, usability, and cost domains is one possible solution. For digital health solutions to have greater impact, quality and value must be easier to distinguish. To that end, we review the…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 81.68
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 24
Authors
6- SCSimon C. MathewsCorresponding
Johns Hopkins University, Johns Hopkins Medicine, Johns Hopkins Hospital, National Patient Safety Foundation
- MMMichael McShea
Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory
- CHCasey Hanley
Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory
- ARAlan Ravitz
Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory
- ALAlain Labrique
Johns Hopkins University
Topics & keywords
- CLARITY
- Digital health
- Usability
- Computer science
- Path (computing)
- Quality (philosophy)
- Risk analysis (engineering)
- End user