Google as ISP – potential ideas for health care innovation?
Posted Feb 10 2010 9:53am
Google just announced that it will be developing an experimental fibre network. According to the announcementthese are the plans:
planning to build and test ultra high-speed broadband networks in a small number of trial locations across the United States. We’ll deliver Internet speeds more than 100 times faster than what most Americans have access to today with 1 gigabit per secondfiber-to-the-home connections. We plan to offer service at a competitive price to at least 50,000 and potentially up to 500,000 people
With this experimental networkGoogle has the following three learning objectives (for now):
Next generation applications based on ultra-high speed connectivity
New deployment techniques of connectivity
Openness and choice
This seems like a perfect opportunity to test out ehealth innovations in terms of efficacyfeasibilityand usability. It’s interesting that the first example they use (first sentence) mentions a health clinic. Whether there will be many health applications is yet to be seen. HoweverI am very excited about these types of experiments.
Howeveras Scot Silverstein is apt to point outwe need to be skeptical of claims and learn from the past success AND failures of IT projects in health care. He has a great websitetitled “Contemporary issues in medical informatics: Common examples of healthcare information technology difficulties“housing resources and commentary on many of these issues. I’ve profiled some of his work in a previous post titled “A voice against irrational exuberance in ehealth“.
Google just announced that it will be developing an experimental fibre network. According to the announcementthese are the plans:
With this experimental networkGoogle has the following three learning objectives (for now):
This seems like a perfect opportunity to test out ehealth innovations in terms of efficacyfeasibilityand usability. It’s interesting that the first example they use (first sentence) mentions a health clinic. Whether there will be many health applications is yet to be seen. HoweverI am very excited about these types of experiments.
Howeveras Scot Silverstein is apt to point outwe need to be skeptical of claims and learn from the past success AND failures of IT projects in health care. He has a great websitetitled “Contemporary issues in medical informatics: Common examples of healthcare information technology difficulties“housing resources and commentary on many of these issues. I’ve profiled some of his work in a previous post titled “A voice against irrational exuberance in ehealth“.