My son Lucas is a researcher in a team working on quantum physics. They
published today a paper in Nature, describing an experiment carried out by
Google laboratories, showing some significant advances in the field of quantum
computers: a new machine with nine qubits and 1,000 quantum logic gates (Barends,
R. et al). http://www.nature.com/news/google-moves-closer-to-a-universal-quantum-computer-1.20032
“Whereas
digital computers represent data as “ones” and “zeroes” -binary digits known as
bits-, quantum computers use quantum bits, or qubits that are both one and zero at the same time. This enables them to each
carry out two calculations at once. The number of calculations that quantum
computers can run rises exponentially with the number of qubits they have”. Thus, enormous possibilities to solve very complex problems are created (Charles Q. Choi, 2016). https://www.insidescience.org/content/googles-new-quantum-computer-may-be-best-both-worlds/4036
It is very difficult to scale up quantum computers, and it will be very complicated to
build an efficient quantum computer, but if and when that happens, and when
they are scattered as they have been classical computers, the impact will be
tremendous. A similar phenomenon is creating disruptive innovation in the
health sector. Let’s see how.
Disruptive
innovation in health care is “a type of innovation that creates new networks
and new organisations based on a new set of values, involving new players,
which makes it possible to health improve outcomes and other valuable goals,
such as equity and efficiency. This innovation displaces older systems and ways
of doing things”… “Probably the most disruptive innovation in health care in
the past 10 years is the change of the position of the patient from a rather
passive actor –undergoing procedures and trying to comply with therapeutic
regimens- towards an active participant –formulating goals, monitoring
indicators, contributing to his/her care-plan” (EXPH February 2016) http://ec.europa.eu/health/expert_panel/opinions/docs/012_disruptive_innovation_en.pdf
Increasingly, patients (especially with chronic conditions) are defined themselves as experts in first person. They are certainly experts on lived experience, content experts. So, we can say that they are both “customers” and “suppliers” at the
same time. They are “consumers”, “clients”, “patients” with problems to be
solved by experts and institutions that provide health care services, and they
are also “experts”, health agents, with knowledge and capacity to self-manage
and solve their problems in collaboration with professional experts, actively
participating in the recovery process.
A person with
a mobile phone, internet, adequate training and connected to an appropriate
organisation of health services ("business model"), will be part of a
new "value network" including doctors, nurses, specialised centres, social
resources, statistics, big-data, diagnostic devices, medicines, etc., enabling
her/him to manage their health problems in a more effective and efficient way
than before. We are now at the beginning of this new era.
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