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The Future of Telehealth Lies in mHealth

Technology has taken healthcare to ever greater heights and improved our understanding of the human anatomy. While medical technologies from decades past improved the quality of treatments and enabled newer breakthroughs to be made, technological innovations today are focusing on a different problem entirely. The problem is equitable access to care.

In spite of mind-boggling advancements in medical technologies, the benefits mostly remain concentrated in urban regions. This unsettling fact is not only true in the United States, but also true for the rest of the world, developed first-world countries included. The problem was not with the quality of care, but with making that care accessible to people living in remote, non-urban locations. Telehealth is touted as a solution for addressing the challenges of inaccessibility of care. In light of this, healthcare mobile solutions has emerged as the most promising platform to advance telehealth, and enable everyone to access quality care.

A M Health solutions for telehealth enables people to schedule appointments with doctors and have virtual consultations using nothing but a smartphone and an internet connection. In effect, people in rural or underserved communities don’t have to travel far to get in touch with a specialist. The implications of mhealth in telemedicine cannot be underestimated.

Just about everyone uses smartphones today. So much so that they have become almost indispensable parts of our lives. From making calls to sending messages, emails, browsing, paying utility bills, and booking movie tickets, we are almost entirely dependent on our phones. There are numerous mobile health apps for exercise, nutrition, diet, wellness, meditation, and so forth. So, it was natural for mobile healthcare applications developers to figure out a way for people to access care. This idea wasn’t new. It had been thrown around for over a decade. But the idea of telehealth received a shot in the arm during the Covid-19 pandemic when it was risky to even leave the house. In such trying times, the thought of consulting with a doctor over a video call probably helped save many lives.

Another amazing use of mobile health applications is in mental health. Tens of millions of Americans are reported to be suffering from at least one mental health problem. It has been agreed to be a healthcare crisis in the country. But the stigma around that subject prevents lots of people from seeking help in the form of therapy or counseling. What’s even worse is that about a third of Americans live in locations that don’t have a single mental health professional. In other words, people in these regions need to travel to different cities to seek out a professional to help deal with their struggles.

That is where telehealth application-based mobile health management can help. It eliminates the need for people to travel to a therapist’s clinic for care. They can have a virtual consultation with a psychologist or a psychiatrist in the privacy of their own house. This is touted as a potential catalyst that would push people to take their mental health seriously and seek help.

To sum it up, mhealth can act as a platform to usher in a revolution in healthcare by making it more accessible, and in doing so, help improve public health.

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