Healthcare gets a dose of Web 2.0

By Victoria Ho, ZDNet Asia
Friday, April 11, 2008 05:39 PM

Healthcare may not be the first thing one associates with social networking, but Sun Microsystems and Singapore's National Healthcare Group hope their latest effort will bridge the two.

Sun and the Singapore Infocomm Development Authority (IDA) recently kicked off the Java Jive Regional Challenge 2008--a competition for developers from tertiary educational institutes in Singapore, Malaysia and Thailand to build Web 2.0 mashups targeted at the healthcare industry.

Mashups denote Web applications which pull data from various sources and compile it into one integrated interface.

This is the third year the competition is being held. Its previous installments took place within Singapore only and competitors then were allowed to choose the topics.

On why the healthcare industry was picked, Sun says healthcare is a topic close to many hearts.

Ong Chee Beng, managing director, Sun Microsystems Singapore, said in an interview with ZDNet Asia: "With the world's ageing population, healthcare will become increasingly of interest to the masses."

Dr Paul Wang, director of special projects at Singapore's National Healthcare Group, is one of the mentors of the Java Jive competition. He said the growing mass interest brings to light the need for applications which are able to engage the public.

"We have the technology and the interest, but not the applications," said Wang, adding that there is a lack of healthcare-related applications for patients--most developments in that space have been for healthcare professionals, he said.

"If patients can get involved with personal care, we can start moving into applications that help prevent illnesses," said Wang.

Wang sees the students as suitable candidates for developing such applications because their perspective lies outside that of the healthcare industry. "They are looking through the eyes of the patient, and they also get to test ideas out with family members," added Wang.

Sun's Ong said customer momentum represents a "significant shift in how new services are delivered" by vendors. The growing reliance on the Internet is another factor for customers to more likely seek answers out on their own first, rather than go to a professional, he said.

"If I find something wrong [with my health], I google it first," said Ong.

Wang said the shift toward social networking aspects in consumer IT is also a trend affecting the healthcare industry, where often hospital IT innovators have problems explaining the purpose of new applications to traditional practitioners who are accustomed to how things have been run.

Increasingly, healthcare IT will move toward a service oriented architecture (SOA) where a veritable "bento box" of applications will be commonplace, allowing doctors to mix and match applications to their needs, said Wang.

Besides Wang, the competition has two other mentors--one each from the Multimedia Development Corporation in Malaysia and the Thai Medical Informatics Association.

The competition's regional finals will be held on Jul. 15 this year.


WORTHWHILE?

0

0 votes
Blog

Talkback 0 comments

There are currently no comments for this post.


Tech Jobs Now!

Search for your ideal tech job:

Create your own yum repository

Open Source

Learn how to create your own yum repository with the createrepo tool. One thing it allows you to do is distribute specialized packages within an organization.


Read more »



  • Enterprise 2.0

    Vince Casarez, vice president of product management at Oracle, explains how Web 2.0 technologies, such as tags, wikis, and mash-ups, can be applied within an organization.
    Play video


  • Nehalem Architecture

    What makes next-generation Intel® Microarchitecture (Nehalem) such a superior successor?
    Play video

 
On demand CRM goes strategic
CRM technology has come of age, and is now able to align with your customer strategy and grow in step with your business.

» Learn more about Oracle’s CRM Solutions



Free the untapped potential of your IT infrastructure
Reduce bottlenecks to drive the efficiency and productivity of Business IT.
» Ultimate virtualization blade
» Scalable SAN solution
» Accelerate service delivery

Unnecessary distraction

Blog thumbnail

If not for the weird story that President Arroyo underwent a breast implant operation in a local hospital, I’m pretty sure the heat and public ridicule would not have abated..... by Melvin G. Calimag

Read more »

Tags

  1. advertisement
  2. blog
  3. facebook
  4. google inc.
  5. internet
  6. internet advertising
  7. microsoft corp.
  8. network
  9. news.com
  10. revenue
  11. search
  12. social networking
  13. software
  14. u.s.
  15. video
  16. web
  17. web 2.0
  18. web services
  19. web sites
  20. yahoo! inc.