Walgreens Starts Steps with Balance® Rewards

Walgreens has been rather savvy when it comes to mHealth. They have a great mobile app and website to help manage prescriptions as well as find answers to health questions. It was no surprise to me when I heard about their Steps with Balance Rewards program.

If you are familiar with Walk with Walgreens, Steps with Balance® Rewards replace that program. Basically, you get rewards for doing simple exercise and health “tasks” throughout the day. By walking, running, or tracking weight management, you earn points that can be redeemed for products and other rewards at Walgreens.

There are a few popular devices that can be associated with your Steps with Balance account — BodyMedia, FitBit, and Withings. This makes it easier to earn rewards and track your progress.

I’m not sure if this is something I’ll sign up for, just because I feel like I have so many other programs I’m involved in, but it seems cool. It sounds like a good way to track your progress toward certain goals, and earn rewards while you are at it. It has the typical features of a health tracking program – you can connect with others, set personalized goals, and see your progress. It looks like it has been pretty successful so far, as there have been close to 10 million miles logged and around 600 thousand users. So if you shop at Walgreens a lot, and you are wanting to be rewarded for living a healthy life, this may be the program for you!

If you want to sign up, it’s free! Just head over here and get started today (and yes, it’s free)

May 3, 2013 I Written By

Katie Clark is originally from Colorado and currently lives in Utah with her husband and son. She writes primarily for Smart Phone Health Care, but contributes to several Health Care Scene blogs, including EMR Thoughts, EMR and EHR, and EMR and HIPAA. She enjoys learning about Health IT and mHealth, and finding ways to improve her own health along the way.

Smartphone Usage Among Physicians Rises in 2012

There is often debate about the use of smartphones in the doctor’s office, but there’s no doubt that usage is on the rise. And according to the Kantar Media Sources & Interaction Study, the percentage of physicians using a smartphone for a professional purpose has risen nine percent in the past year. Here is a little comparison chart showing usage over the past three years (I apologize for how small it is).

smartphone_used_by_doctors_for_professional_purposes_w640

As you can see, the study found that 74% (almost three-quarters!) of physicians are using smartphones for professional reasons. Of that 74%, 62% said they use smartphone apps for work. In addition, 52%  said they use diagnostic tools and clinical reference apps and 46% use apps that help with drug and coding references. The study also found that almost 40 percent of the physicians studied use both a smartphone and a tablet. Here are a few other interesting facts found in the study:

  • 43% use smartphones for referencing drug data
  • 39% find or perform clinical calculations (which jumped 35% from 2011)
  • 31% of doctors make decisions for prescriptions using a smartphone.

I’m sure I don’t need to convince most of you about the benefits of a physician not just being willing, but also knowing how, to use smartphones and tablets in their practice. I think it’s exciting to see that more and more are getting on board. A few months ago when I was visiting with a doctor, I had a question about whether or not I could take a certain medication while nursing my son. He pulled out a drug interactions book, and for about 10 minutes, tried to figure out whether or not it was okay, and ultimately told me he had no idea. When I got home, I was able to find the information I needed in less than 10 seconds.

I also wonder if we will see more patients bringing a tablet or smartphone to their appointment. On another occasion when I was at the doctor, the physician I was seeing told me she never received the records from my other doctor. I wished that I had brought my tablet, where I could have easily pulled up all my test results right there (which I did do a few weeks later, which the doctor thought was really cool.) Doing this could definitely help bridge the gap that sometimes appears when you have to rely on doctor’s offices sending records via fax.

While using a smartphone or tablet in the office does raise concerns about patient engagement, I think it is an overall positive situation seeing more and more physicians using smartphones. Now we just have to get everyone on board with the smartphone physical.

May 2, 2013 I Written By

Katie Clark is originally from Colorado and currently lives in Utah with her husband and son. She writes primarily for Smart Phone Health Care, but contributes to several Health Care Scene blogs, including EMR Thoughts, EMR and EHR, and EMR and HIPAA. She enjoys learning about Health IT and mHealth, and finding ways to improve her own health along the way.

Have you heard of ? If you haven’t, don’t worry. You most likely don’t have it in your city yet. I only heard about it last week,  (where I live) would be getting it.

After reading more about it, both my husband and I were so excited…so much so, that we’ve considered extending our time in Provo a little bit longer. But I also starting thinking about how Google Fiber could help transform healthcare. From what I understand, hospitals and schools in the cities where Google Fiber is implemented will have access to Internet that has a speed of 1 GB, which, to put it simply, is crazy fast.

Having experienced the speed (or lack thereof) of the Internet at Utah Valley Regional Medical Center here in Provo, I was just thrilled to hear they would be able to have faster Internet. After talking with a nurse at my son’s doctor’s appointment today, whose office is on the campus of UVRMC and will likely get the 1 GB of high speed Internet, I could tell that the hospital was very excited about this announcement. This made me start to wonder about what effect Google Fiber might have on Healthcare, so I did some Googling to see what others had to say about it.

Google Fiber has been announced in two other cities — Austin, Texas, and Kansas City, Kansas. There was a panel discussion just a few days ago, put on by Austin Health Tech, discussing what Google Fiber could mean for Austin’s healthcare technology scene. I haven’t been able to track down what was discussed, but I’m sure it would be interesting. I did, however, read this article about Google Fiber and . Apparently, Kansas University Medical Center has already developed three pilot programs that will be using Google Fiber’s network in the community. These programs include:

  • Virtual care of teens in their homes
  • Support for caregivers of people with dementia
  • Consulting and training at risk families through Project Eagle

Barbara Atkinson, Dean of KU’s School of Medicine, was a facilitator at a meeting discussing the possibilites of Google Fiber and healthcare last year. She said,

We’ve done some thinking about how much patient care could be done from hospital to home. Things like managing some chronic diseases — heart failure or something like that — if you have real high-definition teleconferencing and really good, simple machines that could be in people’s homes, you could manage many things. You really could cut health care costs by doing it that way, rather than having readmissions for [things like] health failure.

Reading this made me wonder if Google Fiber might make it even more possible for the smartphone physical that was demonstrated at TEDMED to become a standard practice. Even for those in the cities that have Google Fiber that don’t want to pay the monthly fee for the 1 GB of high-speed Internet will have free access to up to 5 MB of speed. People will have more access to the Internet than they have ever had before.

The article also quotes Dr. Sharon Lee, head of Southwest Boulevard Family Health Care, as saying that Google Fiber “holds promise for improving the level of care at her primary care clinic.” She believes that having the extremely high speed network available to her will give her “access to a quick way to communicate with other providers,” in ways like uploading and sending x-rays quickly from her clinic over to other specialists, which would allow for real-time evaluations.

talked about a brainstorming session that took place last year in Kansas City, where it was suggested that children on home ventilators, elderly patients  or others who cannot travel easily would be able to be seen via remotely because of the high-speed Internet connection. This bounces off the same ideas that Barbara Atkinson discussed as well.

It’s fun to think about the implications Google Fiber could have on mHealth. I could see more doctors wanting to use tablets and smartphones in their offices, especially if they know they will have a reliable (and fast) Internet connection. What effect do you think Google Fiber could have on the future of healthcare?

May 1, 2013 I Written By

Katie Clark is originally from Colorado and currently lives in Utah with her husband and son. She writes primarily for Smart Phone Health Care, but contributes to several Health Care Scene blogs, including EMR Thoughts, EMR and EHR, and EMR and HIPAA. She enjoys learning about Health IT and mHealth, and finding ways to improve her own health along the way.