ABSTRACT Digital health technologies' potential to democratize healthcare access appears constrained by implementation challenges that may reproduce existing inequities. This paper examines systemic barriers potentially impeding translation, suggesting prevailing frameworks inadequately address structural determinants. Despite substantial investment, limited FDA approvals for digital‐derived endpoints indicate possible regulatory‐innovation disjunctures, while constrained funding and incomplete reimbursement structures systematically exclude essential services. We propose a precision implementation framework repositioning implementation science as integral to technological development, potentially challenging linear translational paradigms. This approach emphasizes examining sociotechnical systems, organizational readiness variations, and community‐specific contexts. Whether digital health mitigates or exacerbates disparities likely depends on reconceptualizing implementation as socio‐organizational transformation requiring regulatory harmonization, sustainable economic models, and equity‐centered engagement.
Husain et al. (Wed,) studied this question.