Technology & Innovation

Managing Application Development: The healthcare perspective

April 16, 2019

Global

April 16, 2019

Global
Becca Lipman

Editor, EMEA

Becca is currently a supporting editor and writer for The Economist Intelligence Unit's thought leadership division in the Americas and EMEA. Her primary focus is on healthcare policy and financial market trends. She has also recently developed research programmes that analyse themes in infrastructure and smart cities, as well as C-suite perspectives on talent strategy, small business and IT development. 
 
Before joining the EIU in New York, and later in London, Becca worked as senior editor at Wall Street & Technology where she reported on IT advances in capital markets. She previously held posts as lead editor for a US stock brokerage. Becca earned her bachelor’s degree in both economics and environmental studies from New York University.

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Healthcare has gone high tech. Bulky paper records are quickly giving way to efficient digital records. Clipboards are being replaced by tablets and other mobile devices. And a range of entirely new time-saving and life-saving applications are being explored with technologies that use artificial intelligence (AI), blockchain, cognitive computing, big data analytics, robotic process automation and augmented/virtual reality. As part of this technical evolution, The Economist Intelligence Unit’s survey finds healthcare organisations have embraced the cloud and adopted advanced methodologies for developing new software applications.

An in-depth review of the healthcare industry’s survey results uncovered the following:

  • More than three-quarters (77%) of healthcare organisations encourage their employees to leverage cloud services. Two-thirds (66%) have already adopted some degree of cloud technology and (30%) plan to use the cloud sometime soon.
  • Nearly all healthcare organisations (92%) consider application development important to meeting their strategic goals.
  • Among healthcare organisations, DevOps is used by a third (36%), as is  Agile (36%). And continuous integration is used by nearly a third (30%).  This adoption rate is similar to other industries.
  • To measure the success of applications, healthcare organisations most commonly use metrics of customer/stakeholder satisfaction (70%), application quality (56%), and on-time/on-budget execution delivery (46%).
  • Healthcare organisations organise their application developers much like other industries do. Namely, by department (46%), function (33%), products and services (26%), business unit (26%), and operating system (26%).
  • Security is the number one challenge for healthcare organisations  (and all industries) when it comes to better application development (40%) and cloud adoption (47%). Given the highly confidential nature of patient information, these issues are understandably top of mind. 

 

 

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