It was a pleasure to work with you, as you and your team made this process a more pleasant experience for our team and the participants.
Digital health technology, such as smartphones and smart watches, are revolutionizing the way physicians and patients interact, Eric Topol -- a cardiologist and the director of the Scripps Translational Science Institute in La Jolla, Calif. -- writes in a Wall Street Journal essay.
According to Topol, innovations in health IT and smartphones have the potential to put patients at the center of their care. For example, new smartphone-related technologies can:
Topol noted that such technologies can help individuals to:
In addition, Topol wrote that wearable technologies -- such as smart watches and smart necklaces -- have the potential to monitor individuals' vital signs at every moment, allowing for monitoring that patients typically can only receive in the hospital to their homes. He argued that such remote monitoring devices could potentially replace some hospital care, while smartphone applications designed to analyze patients' blood and vitals could replace some lab tests.
While such technologies may increase patients' roles in their care, Topol noted that some concerns about the innovations exist, including the:
It was a pleasure to work with you, as you and your team made this process a more pleasant experience for our team and the participants.
I just want to tell you that I value people relations more than money. I remember how you were friendly and helpful not going against policies and contractual obligations at the same time, not using your power to make us feel stupid and small. It was a very rare and big experience for me. Really. I will always remember this.
The Usability People are all individuals that you can become friends with very easily. They have a lot of different interests and are a pleasure to work with. I was writing a PRD/MRD for a billing solution and worked with The Usability People in defining the user interface. They are receptive to ideas and are able to mold the user interface from an end-user's perspective. I really liked the idea of putting end-user photograph & short biography around the office to help understand the users