Top Healthcare Trends of 2024
Here are the current healthcare trends of 2024, found using our software tool and selected based on their growth and global popularity across sites like Google, TikTok, Reddit, Twitter, YouTube, Amazon, and more. These are not fads, such as new movies or social media challenges – rather they’re long-term global healthcare trends that are likely to see continued growth throughout 2024. We’ve also included our analysis on these new emerging trends below.
Red Light Therapy
Red light therapy is a type of light therapy that is said to be beneficial in treating a variety of conditions, including acne, wrinkles, and pain. The therapy is said to work by stimulating the body's cells to produce energy. … Read more
Iron Infusion
Iron infusion is the process of delivering iron directly into a patient's bloodstream via an IV (intravenous) line. It is an immediate, short-term treatment for severe anemia or iron deficiency. … Read more
Remote Patient Monitoring
Remote patient monitoring is the process of remotely tracking a patient's health status and symptoms. This can be done through various methods such as phone apps, wearable sensors, or home health monitors. … Read more
IV Therapy
IV therapy is the process of delivering fluids, nutrients, and medications directly into the bloodstream via an intravenous line. The therapy is used to treat a variety of conditions, including dehydration, malnutrition, and chronic illness. … Read more
Telehealth Appointment
Telehealth appointments are appointments that are conducted remotely, typically through video chat. The appointments can be used for a variety of purposes, including mental health counseling, physical therapy, and dermatology appointments. … Read more
PointClickCare
PointClickCare is a cloud-based software company that provides healthcare technology solutions for long-term care and senior living providers. The company’s solutions are designed to improve operational efficiency, care quality, and patient satisfaction. PointClickCare was founded by Dave and Mike Wessinger in 2000. … Read more
E Prescription
An E-Prescription is an electronic prescription that is sent from a doctor to a pharmacy. The prescription is sent as a digital file that can be read by a computer or a mobile device. … Read more
Patient Portal
A patient portal is an online system that allows patients to access their health information and communicate with their healthcare providers. The portal can provide access to lab results, medication information, and appointment schedules. … Read more
Trend Highlight – Organ Donations will Fall as Autonomous Cars Reduce Accidents
Early on in the pandemic, organ transplants fell almost more than ever before–not because people didn’t need organs, but because fatal traffic collisions–a leading supply source for organs–were also down.
It turns out that motor vehicle crashes and fatal injuries account for the largest share of organ transplant supply – nearly 1/3th of donations. And as self-driving cars become more ubiquitous, and the roads become safer, this same dynamic –the one that played out during the start of the pandemic– will play out again. This time though, it could permanently disrupt the supply chain for organ donations.
Demand for artificial and/or animal organs will then likely grow. While there are currently public companies that aim to do this in the future, like Organovo (ONVO), the technology is not yet there.
When it comes to other forms of bodily replacement, like limb prosthetics, there’s already growing demand and it’s expected to rise: More than 1/4th of limb amputations are due to diabetes, and diabetes is not only growing in prevalence but it also affects such a large number of people: 8.2% of the US population in 2018 had diabetes.
It’s a tough market to break into, through. Pharma companies often earn more revenue providing a lifetime of treatment as opposed to a single corrective surgery or device. Despite this, a number of companies, like Unlimited Tomorrow, are building more functional and affordable limb prosthetics for this growing market.
Trend Highlight – The Rise of Patient Portals
Patient portals, online portals where patients can check their medical records, usually after a doctors' visit, are growing in popularity though there's some asymmetry in this growth.
The percent of healthcare providers who offer patient portals is growing quickly - nearly 90% as of this year. However, uptake on the consumer side has been more gradual.
Because the portal is used mostly after infrequent doctors' visits, like an annual checkup, engagement frequency is low so it's rare that logging in turns into a habit. As patient portals expand beyond infrequent doctors' visits and start to include more tools for visibility into daily health data, engagement may rise and usage may become more second nature.
A portion of consumers also avoid using the portals because they want to talk directly with their doctor. Stemming from a desire for comfort, this will start to change, as we've seen happen in the telemedicine industry where consumers are becoming increasingly comfortable with virtual visits to the doctor.
Trend Highlight – Dynamic Staffing for Nurses
The pandemic has caused an unprecedented bifurcation in the healthcare industry. Elective procedures, where hospitals make most of their margin, are down, and emergency procedures are up. With spikes in demand for certain healthcare roles, alongside furloughs and layoffs for others, there’s a dislocation in the healthcare job market that is well served by staffing agencies like Clipboard Health, which focuses on temporary healthcare workers.
The spread of the virus in different areas at different rates also makes just-in-time labor deployment more important than ever. And even after the pandemic, just-in-time labor is growing increasingly realistic as public health prediction improves. Meanwhile, the number of medical operations available keeps rising as new technologies get invented and as awareness of existing procedures grows.
Certain demographic trends are also particularly favorable for staffing agencies. Some towns age much faster than average, as young people leave, so their hospitals end up short-staffed even as demand rises. Every day, 10,000 Americans retire, and start spending less on nearly everything except healthcare where the average spend for the 75+ demographic is almost 2.5x that of the 45-54 demographic.
Trend Highlight – At-Home Doctor Visits are Making a Comeback Among Some Demographics
Housecalls used to be one of the most common ways people interacted with the healthcare system, representing 40% of all doctor's visits in the early 1930s. They've nearly vanished since then, as doctors' rising compensation meant that it wasn't economical for them to spend so much time traveling from one appointment to another, and as patients’ direct payments as a share of healthcare costs (rather than through insurance) declined from 67% in 1960 to 11% in recent years.
DispatchHealth is working to bring back the housecall, through a combination of cost savings and the same scale economics that drive performance for ride-sharing, food delivery, and Amazon's e-commerce operations. DispatchHealth is not just a convenience, though: by reducing the barriers to preventive health, it aims to drive down avoidable and costly emergency room visits.
In fact, the U.S. government provides free smartphones to many Americans on Medicaid through the federal Lifeline Assistance Program. This is done, in part, to encourage communication with primary care doctors on a regular basis, helping to avoid costly visits to the emergency room.
Healthcare costs are skewed to a small number of people who need more care than average. According to some studies, roughly 1% of patients represent 30% of all healthcare costs. In some cases, this is unavoidably expensive, but in other cases early intervention can radically lower the cost. Services like DispatchHealth, which visit patients at home, help in two ways: first, they reduce the inconvenience of medical care, which makes people more likely to seek help. Second, they can examine the home environment and identify health risks that might lead to emergencies later. One example of the latter is that when DispatchHealth workers started to notice more patients facing food insecurity, they began bringing along healthy foods.
DispatchHealth is able to make their service economical by sending a nurse practitioner or physician assistant, as well as a medical technician, instead of a doctor. Because they're operating in specific locations, they can increase their utilization rate over time. DispatchHealth markets itself to doctors as a way to serve patients on nights and weekends, and it pitches itself directly to consumers with ads on hyper-local NextDoor.
See all 4,577 Healthcaretrends
See all 4,577 Healthcaretrends