12 Best Quotes on the Future of Healthcare

What innovators are saying about the next era of healthcare
The healthcare industry is ever-evolving – and we are seeing a steady stream of innovation expanding the healthcare space for the better. We’ve collected the 12 best quotes on the future of healthcare to highlight where medicine, technology, and patient care are headed next.
Here at ModMed®, we are constantly pushing our colleagues, stakeholders, and customers to see the future of healthcare through a more efficient, patient-centered approach with ModMed® Patient Engagement by Klara®.
Take a look at our curated list of Top 12 Healthcare Quotes to inspire your decision-making.
1. “In 10 years, the electronic medical record will be the minor player, in terms of where a person’s health history lives. Most of that information will be kept on the phone or in a secure cloud, and the patient will be highly engaged with collecting, curating and sharing that data. Most doctor visits will be like calling up a YouTube meets virtual human docs, and there will also be an aspect of virtual reality.”
– Leslie Saxon
2. “For the first time, really, we’re discovering physicians are expressing much more openness and willingness to consider information about their patients coming from DIY devices.”
– Ceci Connolly, Leader of PwC’s Health Research Institute
3. “You have these healthcare systems that are basically sticking to a portal, and they’re kind of looking to their health IT vendors — who they’re already paying lots of money — to roll out mobile apps, telemonitoring solutions, and things like that. So it’s like, who’s going to move first to these newer technologies?”
– Naveen Rao, Analyst, Chilmark Research
4. “Traditionally, remote monitoring is seen as a short-to-medium term adjunct to regular care to empower patients for self-management following hospitalization. Long-term use is not usually feasible due to cost. However, based on our findings, we speculate that increasing the duration of the program to enable patients to develop self-competency may improve outcomes.”
– Dr. Stephen Agboola, Massachusetts General Hospital
5. “The first thing we ought to recognize is that mobile is now part of the fabric — every day in everybody’s life. So if you’re not looking at mobile solutions, then you’re not really looking at all solutions.”
– Mal Postings Global CTO — IT Advisory Ernst & Young
6. “You have to understand what are they worried about, what are their fears, what are they trying to do? If we don’t engage with them that way, it doesn’t matter what technology we use.”
– Roy Rosin, Chief Innovation Officer, Penn Medicine
7. “The irony of reducing waste and improving the health of the employer-sponsored population — for over 100 million Americans — is that it’s not a health problem, but rather a marketing and IT problem.”
– Josh Stevens, CEO, Keas
8. “That’s going to be the story for the next year or so: [digital health] moving from a curiosity, to a research tool, to an actual mainstream, accepted clinical tool. I think it’s very exciting.
– Corey Bridges, CEO, LifeMap Solutions
9. “We believe consumer health technologies — apps, wearables, self-diagnosis tools — have the potential to strengthen the patient-physician connection and improve health outcomes.”
– Dr. Glen Stream, Chairman, Family Medicine for America’s Health
10. “[Physicians] are going to look at you sideways if you ask them to align, but if you ask them to be the leaders and determine what the future will look like, they will rise to the challenge.”
– Lucy Hammerberg, MD, chief quality officer of Northwest Community Hospital in Arlington Heights, IL
11. “Value-based care is the right step towards quality-focused care. Value is measured by either improvement in (1) quality of life or (2) length of life for the patient. The individual patient’s perception of these two measures are a major factor in the determinant of value, allowing the patient to be a vital member of the care team. Therefore, the success of value-based care depends on doctor-patient communication.”
– Dr. Simon Lorenz, co-Founder of Klara
#12 is a nice bonus from a classic innovator
12. “It is not the strongest of the species that survives, nor the most intelligent, but the one most responsive to change.”
– Charles Darwin
Author
Simon Lorenz, Ph.D., co-Founder, Klara
Coming from a family of doctors, Simon was destined to become a doctor too but became intrigued instead by the business and services side of healthcare. He decided to join one of the leading management consulting companies in Germany, working to improve efficiency and performance in healthcare as well as in other industries. In parallel, he wrote his Ph.D. thesis on performance optimization in hospitals, which was later published as a book. In 2013, he and Simon Bolz founded Klara with the mission to transform communication in healthcare, so every patient can receive great care.
This blog is intended for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal or medical advice. Please consult with your legal counsel and other qualified advisors to ensure compliance with applicable laws, regulations and standards.




