My Technorati profile

iPad Ranks As First Choice For Doctors But IT Still Nervous About Privacy Issues

Healthcare was one of the first fields to adopt the iPad after it launched two years ago. As with other fields, the initial use of the iPad in healthcare came from doctors and other professionals buying their own iPads and bringing them into their practices or along with them on rounds – a move that predated most of today’s BYOD planning.

A recent study of mobile technology in healthcare clearly shows that the iPad is the number one device used by doctors, nurses, and other healthcare workers with significantly greater use than Android or BlackBerry devices or even the iPhone.

“Based on our conversations, they are feeling the pressure from the physicians and staff to support those devices,” Manish Rai, head of industry solutions for Aruba (the company that conducted the study) said of the 130 healthcare IT professionals surveyed.

Overall the study shows the 85% of healthcare organizations allow and support the use of personally owned devices. The iPad is clearly the most common personally owned device with 83% of organizations supporting it. As for other devices:

  • 65% support the iPhone and/or iPod touch
  • 52% support personal BlackBerry devices
  • 46% support some version of Android devices

With physicians and other staff leading the effort for support of personal devices, it isn’t surprising that the iPad is topping the list. The device’s larger screen real estate makes it more useful for accessing data like electronic records, medical images, and reference material. It also makes the iPad a good choice for illustrating conditions and treatments to patients. It also presents less of a barrier to doctor/patient interaction that other electronic devices like laptops – a concern among some bioethicists.

How are mobile devices being used?

  • 58% are using virtualization technology for secure application access (this mirrors the overall high use of Citrix and other VDI solutions in healthcare due to the need compliance HIPPA and other privacy regulations)
  • 8% provide complete access to their hospital network on personal mobile devices outside of a VDI or similar solution
  • 24% provide some form limited access to hospital applications
  • 30% support VOIP calling (video or audio-only) or medical imaging on picture archiving and communication systems

The results definitely show that healthcare IT professionals are willing to support physician needs when it comes to mobile device, but that their is a distinct concern for data security and privacy – not surprising given the regulatory issues when it comes to healthcare.

See Full Article (Cult of Mac): Here

Why Colleges Support BYOD

Postsecondary students once looked to academic departments for recommendations on which computing products to purchase and bring to class. But today’s generation of college students is far more technologically savvy. They tend to use their own mobile computing devices daily in both their personal and academic lives. Indeed, Student Monitor, a provider of college student–centric market research services, found that 88 percent of students access the web every day to do research, engage in social networking, check e-mail, text friends, collaborate or create content.

Not surprisingly, this consumerization of technology has helped fuel the use of mobile devices on college and university campuses. At the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, for example, 27,500 students and 9,700 faculty and staff members have registered 75,000 devices for use on the university’s wireless network, which averages out to 2.1 devices per user. (Some institutions have reported device-to- student ratios as high as 3.5-to-1.)

Doyle Friskney, chief technology officer at the University of Kentucky, believes this student-driven model has become so infused in the campus culture that it’s become impossible to institutionally direct and control. Indeed, in many ways, students are now setting the IT agenda. Although the implications of this new reality for campuses are still unfolding, those that don’t quickly adapt are likely to see their ability to compete for the best students weaken.

Students increasingly see technology as paramount to their academic success, and they expect colleges and universities to support their technology needs and expectations. According to the 21st Century Campus Report, 87 percent of current college students considered technology offerings when deciding which institution to attend. And 92 percent of current high school students said that technology will be a key differentiator during their university selection process.

And it’s not just because they prefer using their own devices. A BYOD environment that’s well-supported by institutions — and integrated into their current long-term academic and technology strategies — offers several key advantages to students:

  • Enables technology-rich classrooms: The 21st Century Campus Report found that technology is slowly being adopted into college and university curricula. Notably, 31 percent of students used technology as a learning tool while in class in 2011 (up from 19 percent in 2010). Pervasive BYOD will help foster this trend, as faculty will be able to assume that most students have access to mobile computing devices and have confidence that the requisite wireless bandwidth is available to support them.
  • Initiates new ways of learning: According to Lee Rainie, director of the Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project, mobility and wireless connectivity are creating new kinds of learners who are more self-directed in their acquisition and sharing of knowledge, more inclined to collaborate and more reliant on feedback.
  • Increases student engagement: Students who use their own personal devices for anytime, anywhere access will engage more in classroom activities, collaborate more fully with classmates, communicate with faculty and learn how to solve problems using the latest skills.

See Full Article (EdTech): Here