The Innovation Cycle: How Do Adoption and Abandonment Feed It?

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While on a trip to London a few months ago, I noticed multiple abandoned red telephone booths. As I stood there for a few minutes, it occurred to me that these iconic booths – once synonymous with London and a central figure in movie plots such as Harry Potter – are now no more than relics from the past.

The most striking realization was the time frame that this transformation occurred. With the advent of mobile technology, telephone booths were put out of business.

This type of transformation is clearly not the first, nor will it be the last. At the turn of the 20th century, there were many innovations in medicine and communication. Mercury-based treatments and electricity no longer appeal to us. Although many people were eager to adopt these technologies for what they promised, they soon realized their harmful impacts. These thoughts brought me to thinking about the innovation cycle.

How do we adopt innovation?

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This process has been described in 1962 by Everett M. Rogers with his pioneering work, Diffusion of Innovations, where he identified five steps of adoption. It starts with awareness that innovation exists, followed by interest when the individual wants more information and begins to wonder if innovation has a place in their ecosystem.

Next comes in evaluation, where the individual examines innovation using the information that he or she has. Evaluation is followed by trial and finally by adoption. With regard to innovation, Rogers identified five categories of people that are still relevant today, including innovators, early adopters, early majority, late majority and laggards, with a distribution pattern that follows a bell-shaped curve. Furthermore, he identified broad characteristics of each category with an understanding on who they are.

  • Innovators: risk-taking, highly-educated and resourceful people.
  • Early Adopters: also risk takers and highly educated, with leadership qualities and capabilities of providing acceptance to an idea.
  • Early Majority: less risk taking, tending to be more conventional with a willingness to accept new ideas.
  • Late Majority: usually traditional and skeptical.
  • Laggards: the most traditionalist and will resist change.
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I think my mother is an example of an early adopter. She was a mid-career chief pharmacist when digitalization of the pharmacy stock was introduced to her institution. My mom never grew up around computers but she has always had an adventurous spirit and, more importantly, been eager to learn and adopt. She embraced the new technology and spent hours understanding different computer languages. She adopted Facebook even before I did as a way of communication and understanding the world.

Then I wondered, are these static character traits of individual people or does it depend on the specific technology? In my mind, the answer is complex. A broad description should not be universally applied.

During the interest step of adoption, you assess an innovation and determine if it fits with your internal values and daily living. It may depend on the stage of life that one is in, life priorities, timing and ease of use. Moreover, the technology needs to be sufficiently mature and easy to use for the purpose.

One example of timing is related to my special interest in telehealth, which I adopted and wrote my Master thesis about it in 2007 before it became fashionable. When I looked back at the first use of electronic communication for health purposes in the U.S., it turns out to have occurred during the American Civil War. The Union Army used the telegraph to communicate casualty reports, coordinate patient transport and request medical supplies.

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By 1879, a report in The Lancet described a telephone call between a mother and physician to determine whether a baby had croup. In that report, the physician listened to the baby's cough through the phone. There was then a major gap and it took several generations of innovation for telehealth to see the boom that has now also been noticed by political decision makers.

Recently, Senator Cory Gardner of Colorado introduced a bill (S.773: Telehealth Innovation and Improvement Act of 2019) to require Medicare and Medicaid innovation to test the effect of telehealth services on health care delivery.

Another example of this transformation is long before the Apple Watch, there was the Holter cardiac monitoring device. The Holter monitor was developed by experimental physicists Norman J. Holter and Bill Glasscock, after a suggestion by the famed cardiologist Paul Dudley White in the early 1950s, and released for commercial production in 1962.

The "Why Innovation"
section series is a brief write-up from ACC Health Care Innovation Section members to give readers a background of their professional journey, and explain the significance of innovation to their work and in the field. Authors can include their personal definition of innovation, as well as tips or tricks on how to bring innovative ideas to the table in otherwise traditional settings and spaces.

At first, these devices were not portable and could only be used in hospitals. Advances resulted in these devices becoming smaller and lighter. In both examples, it was a complex progression of the technology and its availability that fostered its ease of use.

As we have an adoption cycle, we also have an abandonment cycle. I am positive that most of us remember the hype associated with Google Glasses. Where are Google Glasses now? When Google Glass was launched in 2013, it was labelled as the future. These lightweight AR glasses could do everything your hand-held iPhone can do from the bridge of your nose. Yet, the project was closed down two years later in 2015.

What happened?

Did it maybe not add value for its intended use? Google has been making attempts to repurpose it for our medical practice. Google sister company, X the Moonshot Factory, announced in 2017 that it is redirecting its use toward businesses instead of individual consumers. The new version Glass Enterprise edition has been put in use for companies such as DHL and BOEING, as well as for the doctor's office. While seeing patients, a remote scribe fills out the electronic medical record based on what they hear and see.

Is this now the future? We will see.

In this fast-paced age, many innovations will go through this cycle of adoption and abandonment or maturity. I am curious which of these technologies will still be there in another 10 years and which ones will have gone the way of the red telephone booth.

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This article was authored by Heba S. Wassif, MD, MPH, FACC, member of the ACC Health Care Innovation Council and cardiologist at Cleveland Clinic in Cleveland, OH.