Why does Internet medical care not look in the mouth?

Recently, China Mobile released the “Announcement on the Offline of SMS to Fetion Business” on its official website. The announcement stated that due to business adjustment, the SMS to Fetion service will be offline on June 30, 2016, and the service will be terminated. Fetion, which used to be installed by countless people, crashed down under the impact of Internet company instant messaging software, becoming another footnote for telecom operators to be difficult to use under the Internet tide.

In fact, it is more than just the field of instant messaging. When Internet medical smog is on the rise, both Internet companies and medical institutions are fighting for it, and it is strange that telecom operators, which should have emerged as "big Macs", still have to leave early in this field, but still It is a worthy role. It can be described as "fat and sweetness, and it is not in the mouth."

Why does Internet medical care not look in the mouth?

In the case of telemedicine , according to data from consulting firm Mordor Intelligence LLP, the US telemedicine market is expected to reach $34 billion in 2020. According to the market information analysis company IHS report, as of 2013, about 52% of hospitals and medical institutions in the United States have launched telemedicine services. In 2015, 15 million people used telemedicine services, and the utilization rate of telemedicine in 2013 increased by 50% in 2015. However, according to data from the analyst firm LLC, in the market size of $14.4 billion in 2015, the two largest telecom operators in the United States, AT&T and Verizon, accounted for only tens of millions of dollars in market share, and the share of other telecom operators. It is even smaller.

According to a study by Infoma, a market analyst firm in 2012, more than 90% of the world's 40 largest telecom operators are actively entering the healthcare industry. But what is pessimistic is that according to the Ernst & Young survey, only 9% of executives believe that medical services can boost operator revenue growth.

Why does Internet medical care not look in the mouth?

Telecom operators have basic measures such as cloud computing, mobile broadband, Internet of Things and fiber optics, and there is a channel for this. They can rely on high-speed fiber optic networks, cloud computing and networks to cooperate with emergency centers and hospitals to promote appointment registration, mobile emergency medical treatment, remote diagnosis and treatment services, as well as to build hospital WiFi networks, mobile office systems, etc. for Internet medical companies. Most importantly, they have hundreds of thousands of business halls and a large number of active users.

But the reality is that there are many endowments and many truths have been heard. Telecom operators are still only a small role in the field of telemedicine.

In fact, the layout of telecom operators in the industry is very early. Since about 2009, AT&T, Verizon and other telecommunications giants have begun to lay out medical fields, and many telecom companies have set up specialized medical departments. AT&T, a US telecommunications company, has tried medical information exchange, telemedicine, security services, and disaster recovery. Its online medical community HCO conducts medical information exchange based on cloud computing, integrating patient medical data from various channels into a unified system. Through wearable devices such as asthma trigger sensors and other terminals, data is directly entered into the HCO for unified management.

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