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Consumer Medical Devices Market to be Worth $5 billion by 2011. - 01 February 2008

A new report from InMedica has highlighted the exceptional growth of a number of consumer medical devices due to the increasing prevalence of diabetes, hypertension, respiratory diseases and obesity. The Consumer Medical Devices Production Yearbook forecasts manufacturer revenues to reach over $5 billion by 2011, in a market expanding with a CAGR of almost 10%.

Consumer medical devices to manage diagnosed conditions such as diabetes and hypertension were the largest markets in 2006. Blood-glucose meters and blood-pressure monitors accounted for 21.5% and 23.4% of total market revenues in 2006 and are both forecast double-digit shipment growth to 2011.

The Consumer Medical Devices Production Yearbook 2007 by InMedica analyses a number of factors driving the market for home-use health, fitness and wellness products forward. Steven Burton, analyst at InMedica, highlights that, “in addition to the increasing prevalence of diseases, the raising awareness of the benefits of self-monitoring and exercise regimes is also helping sales to the health conscious consumer. The fact that many affordable consumer medical devices are now readily available at well-known retailers is also an enabler for growth.”

The concept of telehealth is regularly heralded as a potential saviour to heavily over-burdened healthcare providers. In a telehealth enabled environment, a person can transmit health indicators such as blood pressure, heart-rate, blood glucose and temperature securely over a telecommunication network to health professionals for analysis. Burton states that, “by shifting the management of chronic diseases away from the hospitals using consumer medical devices such as home-use digital blood-pressure monitors, the cost saving potential is huge. Telehealth is an industry buzzword, and manufacturers are keen to align their products as telehealth enabled.”

Manufacturer workgroups such as the Continua Health Alliance demonstrate the commitment manufacturers are putting into making telehealth a reality, despite the considerable hurdles facing widespread adoption.

The telehealth concept can also be applied to sports and fitness monitors, where devices designed to aid exercise can be used for post-exercise analysis. Burton comments that, “extra features that can provide motivation, such as the ability to analyse collected data on a laptop or mobile phone using software that can set achievable exercise goals, have the potential to take the level of value to the consumer to the next level.”


Notes for Editors

InMedica is the medical research division of IMS Research, a specialist supplier of market research and consultancy services on a wide range of global electronics markets. The company is supported by headquarters in Wellingborough, UK and offices in Austin, Texas and Shanghai, China. InMedica regularly publishes detailed research on professional point of care markets such as ultrasound and x-ray equipment, and consumer medical devices such as blood-pressure monitors and heart-rate monitors. Key InMedica clients include GE Healthcare, Philips Medical Systems, Siemens Medical Solutions, Toshiba Medical Systems, Hitachi Medical, Canon, Agfa-Gevaert, Hologic, Sonosite, Aloka, Esaote, and Fukuda Denshi.

About IMS Research

If you would like an interview with an expert in this area, please contact Simon Harris, at simon.harris@in-medica.com or +44 1933 402255.

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