Focusing on the Problem, Not the Tool: Acknowledging Technologys Limits

Abstract

One needs to interact only briefly with the outside world to appreciate the ubiquity of technology in contemporary society. The President of the United States tweets, parents ignore their children on the playground while bowing to their smartphones, and airport patrons scurry to camp out at power sources so as to keep their technology fresh for their upcoming travels. Compared to other industries, health care has been accused of slow adoption of innovative technology, but that situation is seemingly changing fast [1,2] From electronic medical records (EMR) to imaging to "-omics", technological advances are having an increasingly noticeable impact in the world of health care, and health care researchers are capitalizing on these advances to fund research programs. Though resistance to such advances by the medical establishment (though not medical researchers) has been noted, few would question the favorable direct or indirect impact some technologies are having in improving human health. However, in discriminant application of technology becomes counterproductive when it diverts attention from alternative, less technological solutions that may be more practical or cost-efficient. A techno-optimist tends to believe that for most problems there must exist a technological solution which trumps all non-technical ones. A techno-pessimist may ask: Is the problem best solved by a technological solution or is the mere presence of technology a distraction to solving the real issue at hand? For instance, providing widespread clinical decision support through EMRs is wasteful when the majority of clinicians perceive no need or have no desire for such support; counting steps with an electronic wearable device to encourage physical activity seems unlikely to have lasting benefit in the absence of a conducive environment or sufficient internal motivation for long-term maintenance of an exercise regimen; understanding the downstream consequences of obesity in great molecular detail ignores the fact that these unbeknownst molecular aberrations would likely improve with the simplest (though challenging to maintain) lifestyle interventions; and understanding the pharmacogenomics of established, trial-tested, efficacious therapeutics to enable provision of more precise regimens will have no effect on improving the medication adherence problem that persists for many common drugs.

Authors and Affiliations

Brent A Williams

Keywords

Related Articles

Chronic Myeloid Leukemia: How to Overcome the Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitors Resistance

Chronic Myeloid Leukemia (CML) is a cancer stem cell-based hematopoietic malignancy that is characterized by unregulated myeloid cell proliferation in the bone marrow and peripheral blood. Tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKI...

Comparative Study of Clinical and Polysomnographic Characteristics of Obstructive Sleep Apnea Among Obese and Non-Obese Patients at Chiang Mai University Hospital

Background: Recent studies have shown that obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is common in both obese and nonobese patients with different clinical and polysomnographic features in each group. However, such studies were scarc...

Art and Science Newton’s Third Law: Action = Reaction

Newton’s Third Law has been active in the universe as from its creation although it was stated by him only in 1687. Isaac Newton, an English natural philosopher and the most original and influential thinker in the histor...

A Pedagogical Description of Channel Interference in Multiphoton Absorption Processes

In this mini-review, the author discusses a different view of two-photon absorption and in general any multi-photon absorption process in a molecular system in a very didactic way. This novel point of view is termed as "...

Relationship between Chakra Energy and Consciousness

In the Hindu philosophy it is clearly mentioned that the chakra energy in human body is directly related to the human consciousness. The present work deals with the experimental study to validate this fact and prove that...

Download PDF file
  • EP ID EP591831
  • DOI 10.26717/BJSTR.2018.09.001858
  • Views 183
  • Downloads 0

How To Cite

Brent A Williams (2018). Focusing on the Problem, Not the Tool: Acknowledging Technologys Limits. Biomedical Journal of Scientific & Technical Research (BJSTR), 9(5), 7387-7388. https://europub.co.uk/articles/-A-591831