I just deposited a check into my bank account by
photographing the check with my iPhone and zapping it through cyberspace. I realize this is ho hum to the under 35
crowd. Soon, there won’t be any paper
checks as the entire transaction will occur electronically. As a member of the over 35 crowd (plus 20
years), I am wowed by this process. I
remember being astonished when my kids told me how they performed this same
process months ago. It’s the same amazement I experience when I
first read about a new piece of technology called a ‘fax machine’.
You mean you slide a document into a machine and an exact
copy emerges elsewhere?
In my younger days, depositing a check into a bank account
meant waiting in line with my bank book in hand waiting for a living, breathing
human to count and record my allowance and snow shoveling earnings. The bank that my kids use has no physical
offices. It is entirely in the Twilight
Zone.
Medicine will not be left behind here. The manner in which medical care will be
administered will be beyond what we can imagine. We are seeing glimpses of it already, but our
vision of its trajectory is limited.
There will be huge advances, but as with all technology, there will be a
cost. The traditional doctor-patient
relationship will fade out as this will not be the bedrock of medical
care. There will be nostalgia for it
from those who experienced it, much as I have warm memories of bank books,
rotary phones, ice cream sodas and playing basketball after school in the
school yard.
I’m sure there is technomedicine going on today that I’m not
aware of and would be amazed by. Smart
phones will become medical diagnostic tools.
Easy Stuff
- Tell Siri your history and send a photo of your rash to DERM APP and prescription will arrive at your door in 1 hour.
- Place phone on your chest and cardiopulmonary data will be forwarded to your cardiologist who will transmit medication adjustments to you electronically.
- Shine beam of light through a urine specimen which will confirm if urinary tract infection present.
Hard Stuff
- Coronary bypass surgery performed robotically by a surgeon in New York City on a patient in Abu Dhabi.
- Artificial organs created in 3-D printers.
- Miniature cameras journeying through the digestive tract, circulatory system and major organs delivering customized treatment for various diseases.
- Smart phone analysis of saliva sample which will screen for risk factors for 20 common chronic diseases that will have effective preventive strategies.
- Satellite delivery of yet to be discovered form of radiation to the developing world which will decimate food borne illness.
- Patient will place his palm on a glass and an electronic signal will be transmitted to internal organs whose function needs adjustment to treat disease or preserve health.
I worry about the collision of technology against the doctor-patient relationship, which is an ongoing conflict. For example, most patients and physicians do not feel that electronic medical records have nurtured the doctor-patient relationship. I think it's been a wedge separating physicians from patients. Generally,
the tidal wave of technology forges ahead with no true regard or attention to
the ethical costs incurred. Doing stuff just because we can doesn’t
make it right. Smart phones won't be smart enough.. Will there be an app for empathy, compassion, facial expression and listenng? Perhaps, AppMD will be tomorrow's health care provider and physicians will join the ranks of typewriter repairmen and encyclopedia salesmen..
It's a shame that today the younger children spend more time in the cyber relationship than a true personal relationship. They will probably be the one's that don't need the doctor/patient relationship. They won't even know what they are missing. To me it is very sad;(
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