Big Data

The amount of individual data bytes created is so enormous, it is fast out pacing the ability to capture, search, analyze or store it. Big Data is the general term used to describe the 2.5 quintillion bytes of data produced each day.

“Big Data is just datasets that have gotten so large and complex that people don’t have the tools or the ability to capture it, store it, search it, retrieve it, analyze it,” Weber said. “They just don’t have the proper equipment or technology to do that.”

“Doing studies and determining why people get re-admitted to hospitals, could save massive amounts of data,” Weber said. “You could save tons of money by not re-admitting people. … They have all that data. The question is, are they analyzing it and figuring out why people go back?”

Abridged, from an original article by Michael O’Connell@moconnellWFED, 17/05/2012

1 thought on “Big Data

  1. I wish I knew the re-admission rate for Malaysian public hospitals – I don’t remember any study done to figure this out. Imagine the MoH saving “tons of money by not re-admitting people”, using this saved “tons of money” on sprucing up our public hospitals with much needed new medical devices or replacing old ones, and not stretching our human resources to the limit caring for patients, thus optimising patient care quality levels.

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