Every Organ Will Have an IP Address
While attending the CHIME Fall CIO forum conference, I had the great opportunity to hear Jay Walker, Curator and Chariman of TedMed, speak at a great event hosted by Xerox. In his talk, Jay talked a lot about the future of healthcare. He offered a lot of forward looking insights into how healthcare is going to change and I’m sure I’ll reference many of his comments in future blog posts. However, he offered one comment that was so descriptive that I don’t think anyone that heard it will ever forget it. He said (paraphrased):
What will it mean when every organ has its own IP address? And every organ will have its own IP address. It’s not that far off.
I later learned that there are some people working on this. As we head into the weekend, I’m not going to offer much commentary on this. Just chew on it a little bit. Roll it around in your head. Dwell on the “impossible” for a little while. What does this mean for healthcare?
[…] In health care, a major application could be in patient monitoring. Marketplace has quoted Dr. Anthony Jones of Philips Healthcare on the possibilities: ”If I now have a continuous monitor, and I have that data going up into a central repository, I can write algorithms and put some intelligence into that repository that allows me to look for trends. So part of what the Internet of things will allow is much more sophisticated, much more continuous monitoring.” Sounds a bit like what John described in his post “Every Organ Will Have an IP Address.” […]