Tech-savvy
patients from Gulf to China to drive Philips health
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[June 09, 2016]
By Toby Sterling
AMSTERDAM (Reuters) - Demand from
technology-savvy patients seeking control over their medical data will
overcome privacy concerns about the "connected" products and services
Philips is now focused on, its chief executive said.
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The success of the Dutch company's decade-long transition from a
consumer goods giant specializing in lighting to a seller of
networked medical products will depend in part on whether Philips
CEO Frans van Houten's vision for healthcare is right.
"Patients want access to data, and many providers... are skeptical,"
Van Houten said in an interview, citing the results of a
company-funded survey released Wednesday.
Van Houten said change was inevitable, despite concerns over privacy
and cyber-security, noting that younger doctors and patients are
more willing to consider data-sharing, which he said leads to lower
costs and better medical outcomes.
The study showed major markets including Germany and Japan are near
the bottom of the list of those prepared to adopt connected
technologies, which can give a joined-up picture of a patient's
overall health.
Van Houten decided in 2014 to sell Philips Lighting in order to
focus on health technology, a high-growth industry where he believes
the company can command better margins, selling medical devices such
as sleep apnea masks and high-end medical scanners to hospitals.
Increasingly it offers data management, analysis and software to
accompany these products.
Philips raised $840 million from selling a 25 percent stake in its
lighting business last month, and says its $1.2 billion acquisition
of U.S. device maker Volcano Inc. last year is a model for its
strategy of filling gaps in its portfolio.
Wednesday's survey is intended to bring "patient views and provider
views together to... force the change in the ecosystem" Van Houten
said.
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Based on perceptions, behaviors and attitudes of nearly 28,000
patients and healthcare professionals, the survey found the United
Arab Emirates was most willing to embrace healthcare system
integration, with the Netherlands and China also ahead.
Germany, Brazil and Japan had the lowest readiness.
Van Houten declined to say whether Philips can meet an 11 percent
adjusted EBITA margin target it has set for itself for this year.
Analysts are skeptical after its first quarter margin was 6.8
percent, although Philips says improvements will be "backloaded"
toward the second half of the year.
"We're working hard," Van Houten said. "We're not giving guidance
today."
(Additional reporting by Ben Hirschler; Editing by Alexander Smith)
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