The number of U.S. hospitals has decreased by 20 percent in the last 30 years,
from over 7,000 in 1975 to 5,747 in 2007. Meanwhile, staff shortages, shortfalls
in Medicare reimbursements, non-paying patients, increases in medical errors,
and rising administrative and energy costs are squeezing hospitals, reports
Kalorama Information.
To counter the challenges, streamline processes and reduce costs, hospitals are
increasingly turning to the use of wireless technologies.
According to a new report by Kalorama Information, Wireless in Healthcare 2008
(The Market for Bluetooth, RFID, Zigbee, UWB WWAN, WMAN, WLAN and other
technologies), the use of wireless technologies in healthcare continues to
expand with hospitals leading the way. Wireless sales in healthcare reached $2.7
billion in 2007, growing at 22.9 percent annually since 2005. Kalorama expects
continued strong growth with a CAGR of 29.5 percent resulting in sales of $9.6
billion by 2012.
The clinical environment is highly mobile -- medical personnel need fast
information they can act on. A shortage of nurses and physicians creates
pressure on hospitals to use staff more productively. Implementing WPAN-enabled
PDA units, RFID wands, and other wireless technologies will help fewer nurses
and doctors serve a growing number of patients in a more effective and efficient
manner, while reducing errors and costs.
"It's no surprise that hospitals are earmarking large portions of current and
future budgets to wireless development," notes Bruce Carlson, Publisher of
Kalorama Information. "In 2003, 25 percent of US hospitals had wireless. That
figure will be somewhere between 80 percent and 90 percent in 2010."
Approximately 72 percent of all healthcare organizations in the U.S. increased
their IT budgets between 2006 and 2007, while 67 percent did so in 2005 and 60
percent in 2004.
Kalorama Information's report Wireless in Healthcare 2008 (The Market for
Bluetooth, RFID, Zigbee, UWB WWAN, WMAN, WLAN and other technologies) details
the latest wireless trends in the healthcare market, an area ripe for growth.
Kalorama Information supplies the latest in independent market research in the
life sciences, as well as a full range of custom research services. Kalorama
routinely assists media with healthcare topics, and can provide experts to speak
about markets in the life sciences industry.