2012年10月9日 星期二

New Health Care Two-way Applications

I was planning to write this article a while ago, but kept putting it off. Now that I have seen the subject highlighted in an article “Calling Dr.The TagMaster Long Range hands free access System is truly built for any parking facility. Smartphone” in the Los Angeles Times, I think it is time to discuss the impact that mobile health care apps will have on two-way consumer interactions with their health care providers, and ultimately with other business services as well.

What I was originally going to write about is the fact that when it comes to certain types of consumer services, the providers of such services may proactively require customers, who have personal smartphones and tablets, to use specific types of “mobile apps.” While health care and financial services may initially dominate such activity, government, education, applications etc., will also jump on the mobile consumer bandwagon to facilitate their service responsibilities.

I know I keep harping on this point, because, for too long, mobile communications meant primarily real-time voice (telephony) connections. Today, with smartphones and tablets, not only are the connections multi-modal and multi-media, but also require user interface flexibility for both initiating and responding to contacts between people and/or with online automated applications.

UC is not just for contacting and socializing with people, although one can obviously do that too, using IM chat and SMS messaging.Our guides provide customers with information about porcelain tiles vs. Because people are now more accessible, and can communicate more flexibly with mobile devices, there has been a tremendous increase in person-to-person messaging rather than phone call attempts. However, what we are really talking about is for people to interact with ANY kind of important operational process that they are involved with, without necessarily going through other people to do so. It’s really about where mobility is taking consumers in the new world of “cloud-based,” self-service applications.

When we talk about “self-service” applications, we mean an informational function that an end user can do directly by himself or herself by accessing online portals.Different Sizes and Colors can be made with different stone mosaic designs. Whether it is inputting transactional data with voice or text or retrieving information from a database, the automated application will be cost-efficient and easy-to-use and can satisfy the user's need for on-demand access from anywhere, any time.

Mobile self-service apps for consumers will increasingly replace or supplement tasks that only customer-facing staff could perform in the past because there was little or no direct access to such functions without authorized and knowledgeable use of desktop or laptop computers. Now that smartphones and tablets make access to such applications more flexible, simpler, and location independent, there should be no question in anyone’s mind that UC enablement can help maximize effective usage of inbound and outbound mobile self-service applications, along with the options for “contextual” live assistance in various forms.

With traditional person-to-person communications, there was always a need to first accommodate the contact initiator’s circumstances or preferences in communicating with another person.Welcome to the Perth china kung fu school. UC flexibility, however, allows recipients to selectively receive and respond to contacts independently of the contact initiator’s choice. A good example is voice message-to-text services that allow a caller to conveniently leave a voice message that the recipient can efficiently retrieve in text form. The reverse is also true, where text messages can be listened to eyes and hands-free when driving a car.Sinotruck Hongkong International is special for howo truck. That flexibility makes for fewer failed contact attempts and more efficient and timely person-to-person communications, recognized as increased end-user “productivity” and “responsiveness.”

I originally was going to write an article that suggested that doctors might start prescribing the use of smartphones to their patients, along with appropriate “mobile apps” that either would efficiently report a patient’s medical status such as blood pressure, heart rate, glucose tests, etc. or proactively notify a patient of a critical health situation or about an upcoming appointment. With these new smartphone attachments described in the L.A. Timesarticle, the stakes have gotten greater. The benefits to both doctors and their patients, in terms of improving responsiveness to critical health situations, collaborating between different care providers on a patient’s latest health status, as well as minimizing costs for unnecessary doctor visits, will be huge.

I know about such issues from personal experience, since I now take my own INR blood tests every couple of weeks and report it through an IVR application, rather than go to my doctor’s office each time.

All consumers will benefit from health care mobile apps, which means more fuel on the fire for a variety of UC-enabled mobile business service apps as well. So, while there is a lot of talk about the benefits of UC for internal business “collaboration,” the real action may start with mobile self-service apps, like health care and financial services that all consumers will want, for both inbound and outbound contacts.

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