Clinical Grade Wearables Accelerate Growth Opportunities for Internet of Medical Things (IoMT) Solutions
Industry convergence and technology innovations will play a critical role in healthcare delivery, says Frost & Sullivan's Transformational Health program
MOUNTAIN VIEW, California, May 17, 2016 /PRNewswire/ -- Due to newly commercialized solutions and pent up demand, wearables dedicated to chronic disease monitoring and other clinical applications are expected to transform care provision models.
New analysis from Frost & Sullivan, Wearable Technologies in Clinical and Consumer Health (http://bit.ly/23X0kj5), finds the global healthcare wearable devices market earned revenues of $5.1 billion in 2015 and estimates this to reach $18.9 billion in 2020, at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 29.9 percent. Meanwhile, consumer health wearables are expected to grow at a CAGR of 27.8 percent, and medical and clinical-grade wearables are expected to grow at a CAGR of 32.9 percent.
To learn more about Frost & Sullivan's strategic recommendations and competitive considerations for this rapidly expanding market opportunity, please visit: http://frost.ly/9e.
"Breakthrough technological innovations in wearable electronics, sensors, alternate power sources and wireless platforms are enabling novel applications that would not have been feasible even five years ago" said Frost & Sullivan's Transformational Health Research Director, Venkat Rajan. "Moving beyond basic consumer centric applications, newer wearable devices with more robust and reliable feature sets open a wide spectrum of clinical use cases."
While the market for consumer fitness technologies provide large market opportunities and simplified paths to market, these devices face high degrees of competition and narrow product lifecycles before being supplanted by the next buzzworthy device. Recognizing these dynamics, developers are investing greater focus towards medical grade gadgets that provide greater relevancy and reliability in health management.
Clinical grade wearables technologies enable care anywhere-anytime support paradigms. Market dynamics in high-acuity or other medical use cases dictate attention towards interoperability, affordability and data accuracy.
"Clinical wearables must concurrently justify their value to payers, patients and clinicians to gain market foothold," noted Rajan. "Confidence in the accuracy of collected data is paramount to the utility of information in any medical decision support."
Despite this tremendous opportunity, many wearable launches have struggled or failed to achieve expected traction. One common pitfall, are systems that are over engineered or unnecessarily complex. The effort required on the user side to understand, maintain or properly operate the device would often lead to high abandonment rates after a few months.
Wearable Technologies in Clinical and Consumer Health is part of the Visionary Healthcare (http://ww2.frost.com/research/industry/transformational-health/visionary-healthcare/) Growth Partnership Service program, which also includes research in the following markets: artificial intelligence, healthcare patient engagement, retail care environments, aging in place, precision medicine. All research services included in subscriptions provide detailed market opportunities and industry trends evaluated following extensive interviews with market participants.
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.
Our "Growth Partnership" supports clients by addressing these opportunities and incorporating two key elements driving visionary innovation: The Integrated Value Proposition and The Partnership Infrastructure.
- The Integrated Value Proposition provides support to our clients throughout all phases of their journey to visionary innovation including: research, analysis, strategy, vision, innovation and implementation.
- The Partnership Infrastructure is entirely unique as it constructs the foundation upon which visionary innovation becomes possible. This includes our 360 degree research, comprehensive industry coverage, career best practices as well as our global footprint of more than 40 offices.
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?
Wearable Technologies in Clinical and Consumer Health
P8A8-48
Contact:
Kayla Belcher
Corporate Communications – North America
P: 210.247.2450
F: 210.348.1003
E: kayla.belcher@frost.com
Share this article