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Inflation to slow down digital transformation in healthcare: report

More than half or 58 percent of those surveyed noted that projects involving the implementation of emerging technologies could be slowed down by ongoing inflation

Healthcare industry professionals globally believe that digital transformation initiatives would be slowed down due to inflation and rising costs, according to a survey by GlobalData.

According to the report, more than half or 58 percent of those surveyed noted that projects involving the implementation of emerging technologies such as artificial intelligence (AI), big data, cloud computing, application programming interfaces (API) and others could be disrupted by the ongoing inflation.

GlobalData’s latest report, ‘Digital Transformation and Emerging Technology in the Healthcare Industry – 2022 Edition’, revealed that 63 percent of healthcare and pharmaceutical industry professionals expected a disruption to digitalisation initiatives in their business units due to inflation.

The same opinion was expressed by 55 percent of industry professionals in Europe and 47 percent in the Asia-Pacific region.

“Rising costs of labour and raw materials has become a dominant topic of 2022,” said Elton Kwok, Market Research Manager of Pharma, GlobalData.

“Inflation is expected to put some pressure on the profit growth of pharma businesses, resulting in reduced investment activities that may impact digital transformation projects. Digitalisation requires funding, time and talent; inflation and costs pressures may force companies to scale back focus and investment in these projects.”

However, more than 20 percent of respondents in the survey believed that inflation may actually serve as a catalyst for digital transformation efforts, most likely due to technologies’ ability to drive cost reduction.

“The benefits and advantages introduced by emerging technologies are still attractive to some companies, though they require a significant amount of time, labour and costs,” said Kwok.