Wednesday, January 18, 2012

New book, 'The Creative Destruction of Medicine,' outlines digital health care revolution

New book, 'The Creative Destruction of Medicine,' outlines digital health care revolution [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 18-Jan-2012
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Contact: Steve Carpowich
carpowich.stephen@scrippshealth.org
858-678-7183
Scripps Health

Author Eric Topol, M.D., outlines the biggest shakeup in the history of medicine

SAN DIEGO (Jan. 18 , 2012) The inventions of cell phones, personal computers, and the Internet ushered in the digital revolution and altered our existence in ways that were unimaginable just a few decades ago. But the most precious part of our existenceour healthhas so far been largely unaffected and insulated from these innovations.

Now, we are on the verge of a medical revolution. In "The Creative Destruction of Medicine: How the Digital Revolution Will Create Better Health Care" (Basic Books, available in hardcover Feb. 1, 2012), Eric Topol, M.D. introduces the digital future of medicine and explores how digitization will fundamentally change the medical field for both professionals and patients.

According to Dr. Topol, the chief academic officer of Scripps Health, we're at perhaps the greatest convergence in our history: the rapidly maturing digital, nonmedical world of mobile devices, cloud computing, and social networking is finally coalescing with the emerging digital medical world of genomics, biosensors, and advancing imaging.

Furthermore, the digital medical fields are already supplying a wealth of innovation. Pocket-sized ultrasound devices, at-home sleep monitors, and air strip technology that can measure everything from calorie intake to oxygen level are currently available. Nanosensors that can anticipate heart attacks and detect the first instance of cancer and breath sensors that can track lung cancer and asthma are in development. Similarly, the sequencing of the human genome has opened a new door in medical discovery; as sequencing becomes both faster and more affordable, Dr. Topol notes, it will become a routine procedure for every individual and the backbone of a patient's medical history, determining both testing and treatment procedures.

Drawing on his own experience as a practicing cardiologist, as well as other case studies, Dr. Topol opens "The Creative Destruction of Medicine" by explaining how medicine works today: Treatments are based on the population, not the individual. Digital medicine including wireless sensors, genomics, imaging, and electronic health records and health information technology systems has the power to radically change that. "This is a new era of medicine, in which each individual can be near fully defined at the individual level, instead of how we practice medicine at a population level, with mass screening policies for such conditions as breast or prostate cancer and use of the same medication and dosage for a diagnosis rather than for a patient," he writes.

Yet Dr. Topol acknowledges that there will be challenges along the way: physicians may be tempted to treat the scan or the DNA data, not the patient; the privacy and security of our data may be compromised; and ethical dilemmas and controversies may arise when, for example, a couple can screen for thousands of rare mutations they may carry before conceiving a baby. Yet Dr. Topol believes that the advantages of individualized medicine far outweigh any challenges we'll face. By leveraging the science of individuality, doctors will be able to get the relevant digital readout from a person to fashion a therapy, instead of using a mass-population-directed strategy. "We now have the tools to do this on a broad basis throughout medicine and for the first time promote a level of prescription precision we have never seen before," he writes.

"Our system has to change," Dr. Topol concludes. "It has to reboot. We need creative destruction of the old rules." In "The Creative Destruction of Medicine," he shows the way to do just that.

###

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Eric Topol, M.D. is the chief academic officer of Scripps Health, director of the Scripps Translational Science Institute and co-founder and vice-chairman of the West Wireless Health Institute in La Jolla, California. He is a practicing cardiologist at the Scripps Clinic and a professor of genomics at The Scripps Research Institute. One of the top ten most cited researchers in medicine, elected to the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of sciences, named as one of the twelve Rock Stars of Science in GQ, Dr. Topol led many of the trials that have shaped contemporary treatment for heart disease. Twitter: @EricTopol

ABOUT THE BOOK

The Creative Destruction of Medicine: How the Digital Revolution Will Create Better Health Care
By Eric Topol, M.D.
Published by Basic Books
Publication date: February 1, 2012
ISBN: 978-0-465-02550-3 $27.99 / $31.00 (CAN) Hardcover 320 pages
Ebook ISBN: 978-0-465-02934-1
http://creativedestructionofmedicine.com/

ABOUT SCRIPPS HEALTH

Founded in 1924 by philanthropist Ellen Browning Scripps, Scripps Health is a $2.45 billion nonprofit integrated health system based in San Diego, Calif. Scripps treats a half-million patients annually through the dedication of 2,600 affiliated physicians and 13,000 employees among its five acute-care hospital campuses, home health care services, and an ambulatory care network of physician offices and 23 outpatient centers and clinics. Recognized as a leader in the prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of disease, Scripps is also at the forefront of clinical research, genomic medicine, wireless health care and graduate medical education. With three highly respected graduate medical education programs, Scripps is a longstanding member of the Association of American Medical Colleges. More information can be found at www.scripps.org.

Media Contact:
Steve Carpowich, Scripps Health
858-678-7183
Carpowich.stephen@scrippshealth.org


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

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AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


New book, 'The Creative Destruction of Medicine,' outlines digital health care revolution [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 18-Jan-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Steve Carpowich
carpowich.stephen@scrippshealth.org
858-678-7183
Scripps Health

Author Eric Topol, M.D., outlines the biggest shakeup in the history of medicine

SAN DIEGO (Jan. 18 , 2012) The inventions of cell phones, personal computers, and the Internet ushered in the digital revolution and altered our existence in ways that were unimaginable just a few decades ago. But the most precious part of our existenceour healthhas so far been largely unaffected and insulated from these innovations.

Now, we are on the verge of a medical revolution. In "The Creative Destruction of Medicine: How the Digital Revolution Will Create Better Health Care" (Basic Books, available in hardcover Feb. 1, 2012), Eric Topol, M.D. introduces the digital future of medicine and explores how digitization will fundamentally change the medical field for both professionals and patients.

According to Dr. Topol, the chief academic officer of Scripps Health, we're at perhaps the greatest convergence in our history: the rapidly maturing digital, nonmedical world of mobile devices, cloud computing, and social networking is finally coalescing with the emerging digital medical world of genomics, biosensors, and advancing imaging.

Furthermore, the digital medical fields are already supplying a wealth of innovation. Pocket-sized ultrasound devices, at-home sleep monitors, and air strip technology that can measure everything from calorie intake to oxygen level are currently available. Nanosensors that can anticipate heart attacks and detect the first instance of cancer and breath sensors that can track lung cancer and asthma are in development. Similarly, the sequencing of the human genome has opened a new door in medical discovery; as sequencing becomes both faster and more affordable, Dr. Topol notes, it will become a routine procedure for every individual and the backbone of a patient's medical history, determining both testing and treatment procedures.

Drawing on his own experience as a practicing cardiologist, as well as other case studies, Dr. Topol opens "The Creative Destruction of Medicine" by explaining how medicine works today: Treatments are based on the population, not the individual. Digital medicine including wireless sensors, genomics, imaging, and electronic health records and health information technology systems has the power to radically change that. "This is a new era of medicine, in which each individual can be near fully defined at the individual level, instead of how we practice medicine at a population level, with mass screening policies for such conditions as breast or prostate cancer and use of the same medication and dosage for a diagnosis rather than for a patient," he writes.

Yet Dr. Topol acknowledges that there will be challenges along the way: physicians may be tempted to treat the scan or the DNA data, not the patient; the privacy and security of our data may be compromised; and ethical dilemmas and controversies may arise when, for example, a couple can screen for thousands of rare mutations they may carry before conceiving a baby. Yet Dr. Topol believes that the advantages of individualized medicine far outweigh any challenges we'll face. By leveraging the science of individuality, doctors will be able to get the relevant digital readout from a person to fashion a therapy, instead of using a mass-population-directed strategy. "We now have the tools to do this on a broad basis throughout medicine and for the first time promote a level of prescription precision we have never seen before," he writes.

"Our system has to change," Dr. Topol concludes. "It has to reboot. We need creative destruction of the old rules." In "The Creative Destruction of Medicine," he shows the way to do just that.

###

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Eric Topol, M.D. is the chief academic officer of Scripps Health, director of the Scripps Translational Science Institute and co-founder and vice-chairman of the West Wireless Health Institute in La Jolla, California. He is a practicing cardiologist at the Scripps Clinic and a professor of genomics at The Scripps Research Institute. One of the top ten most cited researchers in medicine, elected to the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of sciences, named as one of the twelve Rock Stars of Science in GQ, Dr. Topol led many of the trials that have shaped contemporary treatment for heart disease. Twitter: @EricTopol

ABOUT THE BOOK

The Creative Destruction of Medicine: How the Digital Revolution Will Create Better Health Care
By Eric Topol, M.D.
Published by Basic Books
Publication date: February 1, 2012
ISBN: 978-0-465-02550-3 $27.99 / $31.00 (CAN) Hardcover 320 pages
Ebook ISBN: 978-0-465-02934-1
http://creativedestructionofmedicine.com/

ABOUT SCRIPPS HEALTH

Founded in 1924 by philanthropist Ellen Browning Scripps, Scripps Health is a $2.45 billion nonprofit integrated health system based in San Diego, Calif. Scripps treats a half-million patients annually through the dedication of 2,600 affiliated physicians and 13,000 employees among its five acute-care hospital campuses, home health care services, and an ambulatory care network of physician offices and 23 outpatient centers and clinics. Recognized as a leader in the prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of disease, Scripps is also at the forefront of clinical research, genomic medicine, wireless health care and graduate medical education. With three highly respected graduate medical education programs, Scripps is a longstanding member of the Association of American Medical Colleges. More information can be found at www.scripps.org.

Media Contact:
Steve Carpowich, Scripps Health
858-678-7183
Carpowich.stephen@scrippshealth.org


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2012-01/sh-nb011712.php

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