Archive for the ‘mHealth’ Category

ACT Member Happtique Alerts Congress to mHealth Opportunities and Challenges

Tuesday, March 19th, 2013

Happtique CEO Ben Chodor

Today the House Energy and Commerce Committee addressed technology innovation that will change people’s lives. Advances in mobile technology are revolutionizing patient access to health care information. With a smartphone or tablet connected to a medical device, patients can measure their blood pressure, glucose levels, and other vital statistics at home and transmit them regularly to their physician. This allows doctors to track conditions that require frequent monitoring like hypertension, diabetes, and sleep apnea. With more diagnostic data, doctors can spot the early signs of adverse conditions and take preventive measures to improve health outcomes.

ACT member Happtique was invited to testify at today’s hearing based on its leadership in the mobile medical app community. Founded by the Greater New York Hospital Association, Happtique created the Health App Certification Program to review and certify apps that physicians can prescribe.  We provided guidance in this effort and were pleased that Happtique found ACT’s assistance critical.

Happtique’s efforts to make the benefits of mobile medical apps more widely available depends heavily on users’  confidence and trust. Requiring apps to be tested by medical professionals and ensuring they meet strict guidelines for accuracy and privacy is important for the success of the mHealth marketplace. We are pleased to support Happtique’s work to meet these standards and share the position expressed today by CEO Ben Chodor that regulatory clarity from the FDA is urgently needed for mobile health apps to succeed.

Learn more about ACT member Happtique’s Health App Certification Program.

Could Your Smartphone Save Your Life?

Thursday, February 28th, 2013

Appears Also at Huffington Post

It sounds like something too far-fetched even for Grey’s Anatomy: In the middle of a cross-country flight, a passenger suddenly convulses in pain. Responding to the pilot’s urgent call over the intercom, a doctor on the plane pulls out his smartphone, attaches a heart monitor and makes an instant diagnosis: It’s a heart attack.

Based on the doctor’s recommendation, the plane makes an emergency landing and the patient is rushed to a nearby hospital. He survives.

That real-life incident, featured this year on NBC News’ Rock Center, offers a glimpse of the potential for medical apps. We have already grown accustomed to hearing that there’s an app for everything, but advances in mobile technology are about to radically transform health care.

The incident on the plane is only half the story. A smartphone connected to a medical device can allow you to monitor your health outside the doctor’s office — and that’s amazing. But what makes medical apps truly revolutionary is that they use internet-enabled smartphones and tablets to connect us directly to our family physicians and medical professionals. Patients can now measure their blood pressure, glucose levels, and other vital statistics at home and transmit them daily to their physician.

Receiving these diagnostic measurements remotely, a doctor can track conditions that require frequent monitoring like hypertension, diabetes, and sleep apnea. It is also valuable for patients that need extra attention such recent stroke victims or those who suffer from neurological diseases such as multiple sclerosis, Parkinson’s, or dementia. Mobile health apps can also connect physicians with those in underserved communities, remote areas, or with limited mobility for whom office visits are difficult and occur infrequently. With more diagnostic data, doctors can spot the early signs of adverse conditions and take preventive measures to improve health outcomes.

Recognizing these opportunities, the President launched the White House Health Design Challenge, a competition held to challenge designers to reimage healthcare records. The winner, a mobile and desktop product called Nightingale, takes complex patient data (medical history, allergies, current medications, immunizations) and displays this vital information in an intuitive, easy-to-digest format. The Department of Veterans Affairs has already committed to use this app to assist in the treatment of its 6 million patients.

Advances like these, making health care information more accessible to patients, are possible because of the remarkable growth of the smartphone. No technology has ever been so rapidly adopted. Not the car, computer, electricity, microwave, or the internet. In less than a decade, more than half of U.S. mobile phone users have adopted smartphones — they now carry a powerful computing device in their pocket or purse that has constant internet connectivity.

With over a million apps created to use this as a vehicle for wireless broadband, internet usage has exploded. Mobile data traffic rose by 70 percent in 2012 and is expected to grow to eleven times today’s level within four years. Americans are now communicating in entirely different ways than we did just a decade ago, and our nation’s resources are strained trying to meet the massive demand of merged voice and data traffic.

Fortunately, innovation and investment in the future of our telecommunications infrastructure has been very active during this period of growth. What has emerged as the next generation solution is an internet-protocol (IP)-based infrastructure that treats all communication as data.

The IP-based network greatly improves performance by more efficiently managing traffic for existing services while providing scalability to meet the demands of future growth. Internet protocol networks can be modified, offering the flexibility needed to adapt to innovation and new technologies. Functions and features can be added without the need for new infrastructure.

As the results of the White House initiative demonstrate, mobile health care and telemedicine are still in their relative infancy. But its potential to dramatically improve health outcomes is clear — just ask the stroke victim on the plane. What will be critically important for these services to succeed on a large scale — improving patient care and physician resources — is a stable, reliable communications infrastructure. To ensure this happens, and to accommodate the massive growth in voice and data traffic projected far into the future, it is essential we make the transition from legacy voice-centric networks to those that are internet protocol-based.

The only thing that could stand in the way of making these crucial updates is Washington. Laws written in the 1930s establishing the regulation of communications services have been suggested as a guide for IP-based networks. Unfortunately, these are ill-suited for today’s data networks that transmit voice, video, email, and health information every day.

While our telecommunications services have evolved, our nation’s regulatory system has not. Internet protocol is an entirely different mode of transmission than the drafters of the 1930s legislation envisioned. Embracing this new technology will be critical to ensure our communications infrastructure is capable of handling the growth that emerging technologies require. We’ve already seen a medical app save one life. Ensuring a stable network to allow mass adoption of these services would have a profound impact on many more.

mHealth Conference Showcases the Future of Medical Apps

Friday, December 7th, 2012

mHIMSS hosted its annual mobile health IT conference in Washington DC this week. I serve on the group’s advisory board and was pleased to see such excitement about the potential for apps to improve patient care and monitoring.

The field of mHealth is starting to take off and improved regulatory clarity from the FDA is encouraging developers to enter the marketplace and investors to fund them. As the date of conference approached, however, the Washington Post ran a story on mobile health apps highlighting some that are based on flimsy science at best.

When the iTunes store began offering apps that used cellphone light to cure acne, federal investigators knew that hucksters had found a new spot in cyberspace.

“We realized this could be a medium for mischief,” said James Prunty, a Federal Trade Commission attorney who helped pursue the government’s only cases against health-app developers last year, shutting down two acne apps.

It’s hard to take these apps seriously. They certainly have no place in a medical context. But the mere existence of acne curing apps underscores the need for patients to identify reputable apps they can entrust with their health.

Unfortunately, a few in the developer community believe that the real value of mobile health apps is their democratization of healthcare delivery and lower costs. It’s not so important, they suggest, for apps to produce perfect diagnoses since their effectiveness is believed to be a subjective measurement.

This is not a compelling argument to make when promoting apps to the medical community. It’s actually what you’d expect to hear from a hobbyist. And most people in the medical profession regard their work more seriously than a hobby. It’s regrettable, then, that the Washington Post wasn’t exposed to the real innovation taking place in the industry before its conference preview piece.

Where mHealth is really poised to make a difference in patients’ lives is through the work of entities like AT&T’s ForHealth and Qualcomm Life. These companies collaborate with providers of mobile health services that meet HIPAA requirements to provide a trusted app resource for consumers. These keep patients actively engaged in their healthcare management while providing physicians with more useful data to enable better clinical decisions.

Curated stores provide another means to create a marketplace of certified apps which can be prescribed by physicians. These programs have been subject to clinical trials and received FDA approval. One such app from Intel can measure a patient’s medical data and, if a subsequent series of automated questions yield concerns, it can initiate a video conference directly with a physician. Mobile health products likes these are especially helpful for those in remote areas or who have difficulty traveling.

The innovation that is occurring in the mHealth field has the potential to revolutionize health care. In addition to facilitating increased doctor-patient communication, it would bring marketplace efficiencies to an industry rife with proprietary networks currently inhibiting interoperability. As with any institution facing disruptive technology, there are plenty of reasons to resist change. Those who object to this new technology seek to trivialize mobile health, and industry representatives should avoid feeding into this narrative.

Thankfully this week’s mHIMSS conference was an unqualified success, demonstrating that reputable mobile app providers can dramatically improve health care delivery. Lets hope that the naysayers were paying attention.

ACT Member Profile

Friday, November 9th, 2012

Harold Smith

RxmindMe

The latest in our series of app maker profiles, ACT’s Melissa Lee interviews developer Harold Smith. Harold created RxmindMe, the #1 rated Prescription Management App for the iPhone which was acquired by Walgreens, a Fortune 30 company, in September 2011. RxmindMe has been featured in such publications as New York Times to Gizmodo.

How did you get started in app development? What’s your background?

I had never programmed a line of code in my life before I started at Virginia Tech’s Computer Science program back in 2000. There, I started to learn C++, taught myself Java and C#. I graduated in 2004 and, up until last year, mainly did contracting with federal agencies.

I started mobile app development on my own back in 2008 when iOS first released their SDK. Since then, I have had a focus on mHealth and security related mobile products.

Why did you choose healthcare/mHealth apps, especially with the special challenges that developers face, like navigating HIPPA, the FDA, etc.?

At first, it was that I just found it interesting. Well, actually, it was more selfish than that. I had to take one pill a day and kept forgetting. I developed my first app, RxmindMe, simply to remind myself to take the medication. My then-girlfriend, now wife, convinced me to release it to the App Store.

From there, it became more of a pursuit to help people. I received a ton of feedback from people telling me how much the app helped them and improved their lives. From just keeping track of everything, to actually being able to understand what they need to do to care for themselves. For instance, someone with a terminal disease found comfort in being able to see what was in front of them, in terms of medication. Those small stories inspired me personally.

As far as HIPAA and the FDA, HIPAA was the most important aspect. We all want our medical information to remain ours and not get out there. My background working with the federal government and building secure, encrypted applications gave me a different angle to purse mobile development with. The skill set of using encryption, encrypted database contents, files, etc., lent itself to making this easier.

After all, HIPAA is more of a framework than anything of what you should do. I feel all mobile apps (regardless of mHealth apps or not) should be following such guidelines, to protect their user information. It helps build better and more secure software.

What are some of the obstacles you face as a developer that you wish you could change? Are there resources you would recommend?

I think the proposed guidelines by the FDA are the most troublesome as far as mHealth goes. We are seeing a boom in interest in health care as related to mobile devices. True disruption is coming to a market that is so set in their ways.

While I think the FDA guidelines provide value, I think there needs to be a good balance of regulation and letting people innovate. Setting a multi-month or even year-long cycle of innovation due to regulations will destroy the market.

There is just a lot of uncertainty, for startups and indie developers. If anything, the FDA should be helping these people navigate the issues and build better products.

What do you, or app developers generally, need most in order to have continued success?

We need an environment that fosters success. That’s why organizations like ACT are so important—that’s exactly what they do on behalf of app developers, and they keep us up-to-date on what Washington is doing that could have serious impact on our ability to grow and innovate. And local groups, such as MoDevDC where developers can talk and collaborate, are an amazing help. It allows networking with other developers, business connections, and contacts to people outside of your social circles. Being outside of Silicon Valley, we sometimes take what we can get, but we have an amazing app developer network here in DC. People are always willing to help and lend an ear. That sense of community really helps.