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Advances in health information technology and Internet of Things changing health care delivery

Army Lt. Col. Mark Mellott, branch chief of the Defense Health Agency’s Health Information Technology Innovation and Advanced Technology Development Division, sees the Internet of Things as ‘the perfect storm’ when it comes to changing knowledge, attitudes and beliefs regarding how healthcare is administered to beneficiaries. Army Lt. Col. Mark Mellott, branch chief of the Defense Health Agency’s Health Information Technology Innovation and Advanced Technology Development Division, sees the Internet of Things as ‘the perfect storm’ when it comes to changing knowledge, attitudes and beliefs regarding how healthcare is administered to beneficiaries.

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Last summer, Army Lt. Col. Mark Mellott discussed how the Internet of Things (IoT) has the potential to change the dynamic of health care. In many ways that potential has now become a reality. 

“We have taken a massive leap forward,” said Mellott, the execution branch chief of the Defense Health Agency’s (DHA) Health Information Technology Innovation and Advanced Technology Development Division. “When talking about data and devices, we are at what one would call a ‘perfect storm’ of information technology transformation. This transformation has been going on for several years. We’ve looked at devices to help change knowledge, attitude and beliefs, as we’re moving from health care to health.” 

IoT is a network of physical objects—communication devices, vehicles, buildings, security systems and more—embedded with electronics, software and sensors that collect data. IoT technologies such as biosensors can use data integration to forecast a person’s current state of health and potential risks moving forward. 

Among other things, the IoT allows objects to be sensed and controlled remotely in an innovation ecosystem—a testing environment that provides an area for Military Health System innovators from external communities to access mock MHS tools in a safe and standard way to help accelerate the overall innovation lifecycle. 

“This is really an exciting time here at the DHA,” said Mark Goodge, deputy director of the Innovation and Advanced Technology Development Division. “IoT has opened a lot of opportunities to exploit the capabilities for enhancement of health surveillance, and it has empowered medical professionals, health providers and patients to have data at their fingertips, anytime and anywhere.” 

In addition, Goodge also spoke about fulfilling the vision of former assistant secretary of Defense for Health Affairs, Jonathan Woodson. “To paraphrase something Dr. Woodson said, ‘We must remove the walls of where we think treatment is done, and start looking into the areas of home health care and other opportunities where we can care for our patients and shift our focus from health care to health. People should not have to come to a military treatment facility, we should be able to go to them, and we have the technology and systems to make this a reality.”

Lt. Col. Mellott has a clear concept of where the DHA will be in the next several years. “We should no longer be talking about mobile health care, and telehealth,” he said. “Mobile and telehealth will just be another integrated part of health care. The advances we’ve made, along with the potential that we have as an agency, will get us to that point.” 

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Bono to AFCEA: New electronic health record is key for future of engaging military health patients

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10/14/2016
Navy Vice Adm. Raquel Bono, director of the Defense Health Agency, said military members have to be ready to go anywhere in the world on short notice. To help solve the complexity of care with that readiness aspect, Bono pointed to the Military Health System’s new electronic health record, MHS GENESIS, as key to helping conversations between doctors and patients, no matter where people are. (Courtesy photo)

Navy Vice Adm. Raquel Bono, director of the Defense Health Agency, spoke at the Armed Forces Communications and Electronics Association’s Health IT Day 2016, a gathering of approximately 1,000 federal government workers, including the Departments of Defense, Veterans Affairs, and Health and Human Services, as well as private IT industry representatives.

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Organized chaos: Corpsmen conduct hands-on training

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10/13/2016
Navy corpsmen treat a notional casualty during a training evolution on Camp Lejeune, North Carolina. The Navy Medical Augmentation Program Sustainment Training brings corpsmen from up and down the east coast to Camp Lejeune to get hands-on training. The corpsmen are all attached to the 2nd Medical Battalion but are assigned at different stations throughout the east coast. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. Jon Sosner)

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Department of Defense continues commitment to Global Health Security Agenda

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Dr. Karen Guice, acting assistant secretary of Defense for Health Affairs, addressed attendees on the second day of the 2016 Defense Centers of Excellence for Psychological Health and Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) Summit Sept. 14, 2016.

Department of Defense and other senior U.S. government leaders travel to the Netherlands to attend a summit on the Global Health Security Agenda

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Women’s health essential to force readiness

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Women with a U.S. Marine Female Engagement Team operating in Europe demonstrated their capabilities in Marine Corps martial arts, non-lethal weapons, foreign weapons handling and combat lifesaving to Romanian and U.S.  Women comprise more than 27 percent of U.S. Marine Corps and Navy personnel, making women’s health essential to force readiness. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Sgt. Michelle Reif)

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Air Force medics train in battlefield medicine course

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9/28/2016
U.S. Air Force Senior Airman Michael Triana, left, 347th Operations Support Squadron independent duty medical technician-paramedic, addresses injuries on a simulated patient during a tactical combat casualty care course, in Okeechobee, Florida. The course tests and reinforces participants’ lifesaving medical skills while they are in high-stress, combat scenarios. (U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. Ryan Callaghan)

Through this course, the Air Force gets highly-qualified medics providing quality medical care in austere environments

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Battlefield Medicine Course

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9/28/2016
U.S. Air Force Senior Airman Michael Triana, left, 347th Operations Support Squadron independent duty medical technician-paramedic, addresses injuries on a simulated patient during a tactical combat casualty care course, in Okeechobee, Florida. The course tests and reinforces participants’ lifesaving medical skills while they are in high-stress, combat scenarios. (U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. Ryan Callaghan)

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Japan Ground Self-Defense Force medics carry a casualty from an ambulance to a JGSDF helicopter while a U.S. Army medic calls directions during a bilateral medical training exercise.

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Japan Ground Self-Defense Force medics carry a casualty from an ambulance to a JGSDF helicopter while a U.S. Army medic calls directions during a bilateral medical training exercise.

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9/23/2016
It is important for Soldiers to know what to expect when a MEDEVAC helicopter arrives and how to approach the helicopters, load patients aboard and how to interact with their crew chief and flight medic in order to do ground handoffs. (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. 1st Class Matthew Chlosta)

It is important for Soldiers to know what to expect when a MEDEVAC helicopter arrives and how to approach the helicopters, load patients aboard and how to interact with their crew chief and flight medic in order to do ground handoffs. (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. 1st Class Matthew Chlosta)

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