Monday, August 27, 2012

Coming Next: Using an App as Prescribed | P4 Medicine at Ohio State

Captured by The New York Times
By JOSHUA BRUSTEIN
Published: August 19, 2012

Before long, your doctor may be telling you to download two apps and call her in the morning.

Lee Perlman, left, and Benjamin Chodor of Happtique, developer of a medical app that can facilitate the writing of prescriptions. Photo courtesy of The New York Times

Smartphone apps already fill the roles of television remotes, bike speedometers and flashlights. Soon they may also act as medical devices, helping patients monitor their heart rate or manage their diabetes, and be paid for by insurance.

The idea of medically prescribed apps excites some people in the health care industry, who see them as a starting point for even more sophisticated applications that might otherwise never be built. But first, a range of issues ? around vetting, paying for and monitoring the proper use of such apps ? needs to be worked out.

?It is intuitive to people, the idea of a prescription,? said Lee H. Perlman, managing director of Happtique, a subsidiary of the business arm of the Greater New York Hospital Association. Happtique is creating a system to allow doctors to prescribe apps, and Mr. Perlman suggested that a change in the way people think about medicine might be required: ?We?re basically saying that pills can also be information, that pills can also be connectivity.?

Simple apps that track users? personal fitness goals have already gained wide traction. Now medical professionals and entrepreneurs want to use similar approaches to dealing with chronic ailments like diabetes or heart disease.

Anand K. Iyer, president of WellDoc, which is marketing the DiabetesManager app. Photo courtesy of The New York Times

If smartphone-based systems can reduce the amount of other medical care that patients need, the potential benefit to the health care system would be enormous; the total cost of treating diabetes alone in 2007 was $174 billion, according to the most recent statistics from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Click here to read more.

Like this:

Be the first to like this.

Source: http://phc.osumc.edu/2012/08/27/coming-next-using-an-app-as-prescribed/

msg network ray j anthony shadid gary carter this means war bobby brown suzanne somers

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.