December 14, 2018

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Health care democratization underway, according to second annual Stanford Medicine Health Trends Report

Credit: Stanford University Medical Center
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Credit: Stanford University Medical Center

An explosion in data is driving increased democratization in health care, according to the second annual Health Trends Report published today by Stanford Medicine.

Building on last year's findings about the emergence and changing role of data in medicine, the latest report takes a deeper look at how using and sharing data will transform research, the practice of medicine and the role patients play in their own .

This transformation is being driven by the growing volume of available data across the , as well as new technologies and industry players that are taking from a human scale to a digital scale.

"We are on the cusp of something that's never been possible before—the ability to truly democratize the practice of care, spreading expertise without friction wherever it's needed," said Lloyd Minor, MD, dean of the School of Medicine. "Whole realms of expertise, previously siloed, are beginning to open up to more people in more places than ever before.

"It's clear that we have work to do in terms of making this incredible amount of data easier to access, share and protect," he added. "But I am certain that we are advancing toward a future of care that is more preventive, predictive, personalized and precise."

The report reflects a comprehensive review and analysis of existing health care research and publicly available data on the current and emerging trends facing the health care sector, combined with insights from Stanford faculty and external health care experts.

Findings

The report identifies three main pillars influencing the democratization of health care: intelligent computing, sharing and .

A version of the report, including the executive summary, is available online.

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