Health IT spending jumps due to EHRs, mobile devices

by Grant Huang on Jun 13, 2011

DecisionHealth stock photoYou and your peers are likely to boost your health information technology (IT) spending this year, according to a May 2011 study by RNCOS Industry Research Solutions, a private market research company. Health IT spending is projected to hit $40 billion -- with a "B" -- in 2011, driven by massive growth in electronic health records (EHRs) and mobile health applications, the study claims.

The journey to the ICD-10-CM diagnosis code set is also a driving factor, according to RNCOS. On the EHR side, growth in software sales is the highlight: health software spending jumped 20.5% from 2010 to 2011, and is projected to reach $6.8 billion by year's end.

The market for mobile health applications, typically used on smartphones, is estimated to reach $2.1 billion by the year's end, according to the study. The applications range from patient programs that measure blood pressure and calories to physician-oriented utilities that can look up drug interactions.

Despite the wide diversity in the age of physicians, 72% of U.S. physicians use smartphones and more than 20% own iPads -- the tablet PCs from Apple -- RNCOS found.

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