New Research From Biotricity and the Society for Participatory Medicine Finds Consumers Ready to Take Active Role in Managing Health & Illness

Survey Shows Americans Overwhelmingly Support Wearing Personal Monitoring Devices But Only When Information is Shared With Their Healthcare Professional


REDWOOD CITY, Calif., Feb. 02, 2016 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Americans are fully prepared to take a more active role in managing their over-all health and are more than willing to wear personal monitoring devices to help themselves and medical professionals improve their care. According to a national survey of 1,000 respondents commissioned by The Society for Participatory Medicine and healthcare technology company Biotricity Inc., and more than 8 out of 10 consumers (84 percent) believe that tracking their own health data with a clinically accurate monitoring device will help improve their over-all health.                                                                                                              

The survey, which was conducted by ORC International in December 2015, cited that 71 percent of adults would use a personal monitoring device if it was clinically accurate. This comes on the heels of a recently released McKinsey & Company report, which discusses how technology is revolutionizing the understanding and treatment of disease and, in particular, how wearables are poised to transform medicine.

"Americans are tremendously in favor of technology that allows them to self-manage their chronic conditions and proactively manage and monitor their health,” said Waqaas Al-Siddiq, president and CEO of Biotricity, Inc. “Chronic illness such as heart disease has created an increasing burden to worldwide healthcare infrastructures, and preventive care is recognized as a vital component of any comprehensive healthcare service. Unlike wearables that are not capable of providing clinical-grade data, we recognize that the future lies with empowering individuals with robust self-management solutions, and we believe the survey findings demonstrate that Americans are eager to use these tools to manage their personal health issues.”

In fact, participants were in support of using a personal monitoring device that provides tracking of blood pressure, heart rate, respiratory rate, glucose, physical activity and other key assessments if it was clinically accurate and easy to use. As patients become more engaged in supervising their own health and collaborating with their healthcare professionals, the most common reasons for the 3 out of 4 who would use a personal monitoring device include:

Reasons 75 Percent of American Adults Would Wear
Personal Monitoring Devices to Manage Health
Percent of
Americans
For personal use AND to share with their healthcare professional 57%
For personal use only 13%
For healthcare professional use only 5%


With the number of people being diagnosed with cardiovascular disease (CVD) at an alarming rate, clinically accurate monitoring devices can provide a much-needed solution to improve outcomes. In fact, healthcare continues to emphasize preventive care in an effort to mitigate the rising demand that the growing CVD population is placing on the system. However, traditional methods are failing to ensure that CVD patients comply with their physicians' medical directives, including but not limited to medication adherence, dietary changes, lifestyle changes, and exercise regiments.

“Increasingly, patients are actively monitoring their own health data to better self-manage their chronic diseases and collaborate with their healthcare professionals. Self-monitoring is a vital component of an efficient and high-functioning healthcare system. This survey shows that this concept resonates with the public and that most respondents are willing to utilize technology to gather this data to improve their health,” said Daniel Z. Sands, MD, MPH, co-founder and co-chair of the Society of Participatory Medicine and a practicing physician.

About the Survey
The ORC International Telephone CARAVAN® survey conducted December 10-13, 2015. The study was conducted using two probability samples: randomly selected landline telephone numbers and randomly selected mobile (cell) telephone numbers. The combined sample consists of 1,011 adults (18 years old and older) living in the continental United States (505 male, 506 female.) Of the 1,011 interviews, 509 were from the landline sample and 502 from the cell phone sample. The margin of error for the sample of 1,011 is +/- 3.08 at the 95% confidence level. Surveys are collected by trained and supervised US based interviewers using ORC International’s computer assisted telephone interviewing (CATI) system. Final data is adjusted to consider the two sample frames and then weighted by age, gender, region, race/ethnicity and education to be proportionally representative of the US adult population.

About Biotricity Inc.
Biotricity, Inc. is a healthcare technology company dedicated to delivering innovative, medically relevant biometric monitoring solutions that enable people to make lifestyle changes and achieve a better quality of life. The company is focused on delivering leading-edge, medically relevant biometric monitoring solutions for medical, healthcare and consumer use. To learn more, visit www.biotricity.com.

Biotricity (OTC.QB:BTCY) expects to begin trading on the OTC Venture Marketplace (OTC QB) under the ticker “BTCY” in the next few days.

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About the Society for Participatory Medicine

The Society for Participatory Medicine (SPM) is a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit membership organization devoted to promoting the concept of participatory medicine, a movement in which activated patients engage as drivers of their health, and in which providers encourage and value them as full partners. SPM does this by fostering conversation, influencing policy, advocating research, and educating patients, health care professionals, and others. SPM members are stakeholders from across the health care continuum. Click here for more information and to join the Society for Participatory Medicine.
For further inquiries, or for a full copy of the survey results, contact: info@participatorymedicine.org.

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