“Macaw(TM)” Launched by U.S. Preventative Medicine as the Ultimate Health Hub App Enabled by Qualcomm Life

Earlier this week I wrote about Qualcomm’s venture into the healthcare market with the launch of Qualcomm Life.  Well, they have wasted little time in making their mark on the mHealth market.  Yesterday they announced the release of a one-of-a-kind mobile health app: Macaw, which was developed in conjunction with U.S. Preventative Medicine.

The difference between this app and the myriad other apps out there is that it is a full personal health monitor.  Macaw not only tracks activity, it covers the full range of health information.  It brings together all of the information from health and fitness apps, plus lab results and wireless devices.

In this world of instant information people are looking for a one stop shop for healthcare just like everything else.  Macaw appears to be exactly that type of app.  Here are some of the highlights from the press release:

Features include:

7 questions to quickly assess your health

GPS to track exercise

Ability to set goals and track weight and calories

Reminders about recommended preventive screenings based on age and gender

Activity and knowledge cards that unlock chances for weekly prizes

Additional features for members of The Prevention Plan include:

A link to the Prevention Score, a unique tool that tracks an individual’s prevention efforts and key health indicators throughout the year

Activity auto-uploaded to The Prevention Plan

Exercise, weight and calories tracked

The Prevention Plan is a clinically-based program designed to help people live healthier lives and avoid having health issues in the first place.  By tying this program into an app on smartphones it only makes it easier for users to actually accomplish what they set out to do: live a healthier life.

I have used a few different apps and gadgets like this, but I am really excited to see how effective Macaw really is.  The fact that it is free only makes it that much more interesting.

Macaw is currently available on the iPhone as well as Android systems.

For the full press release please follow this link.

December 8, 2011 I Written By

Centricity Radiology Mobile Access Receives FDA Clearance for Advanced, Diagnostic CT and MR Image Review

GE is one of the oldest countries in America.  They have led the way in so many technologies that it is really no surprise that they are leading the way in mHealth apps.  GE Healthcare announced yesterday that their Centricity Radiology Mobile Access App has received FDA clearance for Advanced DiagnosticCT and MR Image Review.  This is not the first app to receive clearance, but it is probably the most important thus far.

A recent study from ABI Research predicted that the mobile health app market is on track to hit $400 million by 2016 (up from $120 million in 2010), and with that much money on the table, you have to think major companies are looking to see how they care share the wealth.  One thing that is undoubtedly holding some companies back is not knowing what regulations are going to be placed on mHealth apps.  With the Centricity Radiology Access App receiving their 510(k) clearance I have to think more companies will be following suit ver quickly.

While there is still some uncertainty as to what regulations may still be coming, announcements like this have to embolden other companies to get their own apps on the market.  We aren’t just talking about apps that measure your exercise, or give you tips about staying healthy.  These are apps that can greatly enhance patient experiences, drastically cut diagnosis times, decrease pain, and possibly even save lives.

The app allows radiologists to provide review and diagnose images while away from their hospital workstation within moments of the scans being taken, reducing test result wait times.  Most of your time as a patient is spent waiting for various phases of the visit to take place.  If they can dramatically decrease the amount of time it takes for tests to come back then the whole process will be expedited.

From the press release:

Centricity Radiology Mobile Access 2.0 is the industry’s only mobile product with clearance for primary diagnosis that accesses images and reports from Centricity PACS. This new mode of access removes a sizable productivity barrier for an increasingly mobile field.

“This application and its diagnostic clearance provide further validation of our continued investment in our Centricity PACS platform,” said Don Woodlock, Vice President and General Manager of GE Healthcare IT. “As a native application for the Apple iOS and Android operating systems, Centricity Radiology Mobile Access requires very little training and, we believe, provides a more productive user experience versus an emulated Windows application that was designed to be driven by a mouse. Today, Centricity PACS stores one in five exams in the US. These advanced wireless capabilities will only expand its utility.”

While this is clearly of great benefit to the radiology community, it is important news for the mHealth industry as a whole.  I have said for a long time that the real boom of mHealth will be when the major companies put their minds and money behind development to generate apps that truly help save lives.  Seeing more apps receive their 510(k) clearance from the FDA will only help push the movement forward.

December 2, 2011 I Written By

MyCrisisRecords Update and Demo Video

A couple of months ago I wrote about a cool new product, mycrisisrecords.  It is a personal health record that can be accessed by emergency care personnel by simply scanning a QR code from a card in your wallet, calling a 24/7 call center, or inserting a USB flash drive.

Since first writing about it, they have developed a demo video, which you can find below, that shows the steps involved in registering for an account as well as how the whole thing works.  I was also sent a sample MyCrisis card to see just how easy it was to access life saving information.

It really was as simple as clicking a button on my smartphone and I had access to name, blood type, allergies, medications, health conditions, emergency contact numbers, and personal physician including phone number.  It would have only taken the push of a button to send an alert that there was an emergency so that the appropriate people could be contacted.

When I first wrote about it I wasn’t sure how easy it would really be, and with my life on the line I wasn’t sure I would want the paramedic pulling out his smart phone and waiting for an app to work, but it was incredibly fast.  The initial screen does not go in-depth with medical information, but it does give you the ability to do so if there is an actual emergency.

Having actually seen it in action I can now see the tremendous value this product can have, especially for people who have special medications or medical conditions.  We have all seen the bracelets people wear, and being in the military I have seen the special dog tags, but what could be simpler than carrying what amounts to a business card in your wallet or purse?  This also provides a wealth of information as opposed to one allergy or condition.

They also provide varying levels of membership that offer certain benefits such as how many times you can have your personal health record transmitted, special website access, and the option to buy the USB based my crisis capsule.  There is also an app for Apple and Android that is in development that will be available to all members.

This really is an amazingly simple concept that could provide tremendous peace of mind for people, especially those with life threatening medical conditions.

November 11, 2011 I Written By

Smartphone-Based Petri Dish Provides Quality Imaging With a Much Smaller Device

This would definitely fall under the category of things your smartphone can do that you will never use, but that could prove to be very valuable to scientists.  You can read about all of the details of this cool new device on the Caltech website, but here are some of the highlights.

Petri dishes are probably the simplest and oldest tool used by biologists to grow cells and conduct studies on things such as bacteria.  The ePetri dish allows for the same cell growth and observation but in a simpler, and in some ways more controlled, way.

The engineers at Caltech used a Google smart phone, a commercially available cell-phone image sensor, and Lego building blocks to build this simple, yet powerful device.  I personally find it incredibly interesting that Legos were used in the ePetri dish as there are few people who have not let their imagination wander with Legos.  To see them used on a device that could have such a tremendous impact is very cool.

The culture the scientist is studying is placed on the sensor and the whole device is placed into the incubator attached to a wire that runs to a laptop outside the incubator.  This allows scientists to study the culture without removing it from the incubator and risking possible contamination.

In the past, scientists had to repeatedly remove their dishes to study them under microscopes.  The ePetri dish allows for the same study to be done without the risk of contamination, and in a much less labor intensive manner.

In the long run, the engineers are hoping to broaden the technology to other research arenas.  They are even hoping to develop a standalone device that includes the incubator allowing research to literally be done at any given desktop.  Something that was impossible with the bulky, expensive microscopes that have been used up until now.

October 7, 2011 I Written By

$80 Android Phone Changing the Smartphone Market

At first glance $80 for a smartphone doesn’t really seem like that amazing of a deal.  Especially when you consider that is has a smaller screen, less processing power, and fewer megapixels in the camera.  But, when you consider that this is the price for the phone without any type of contract it becomes a little bit more interesting.

The phone is the Android powered IDEOS from the Chinese company Huawei.  It was released earlier this year in Kenya and has already been bought by 350,000+ Kenyans.  In an area of the world that is stricken by poverty, this device is bringing the wonders of the smartphone to people who could never have afforded such a luxury in the past.

In comparison to the major smartphones on the market right now, namely the iPhone4, DroidX2, and Blackberry Bold, it does not have the same level of technology.  The screen is relatively small, though larger than the screen on the Blackberry Bold.  The RAM is half of that of the major smartphones, and the battery life is worse as well.

However, when you consider the cost it is incredibly reasonable.  The IDEOS sells for about $80 with no contract, compared to the iPhone4 at $800, the DroidX2 at $700, and the Blackberry Bold at $600 without a contract.  That means you can get a phone for 85-90% less than the big boys.

It is also uses the Android OS which means that the sky is limit with 300,000+ apps.  The open source software makes it possible for apps to be developed in developing countries in ways that would never be possible with Apple or Blackberry’s stringent requirements.  This makes these cheap phones even more useful in these poor countries.

Apps are being developed to help farmers better market their products, and even track diseases that can destroy farming which is a huge part of most African nation’s economies.

In the sphere of this blog, I have already written about all kinds of apps and gadgets being developed specifically with Africa in mind.  This phone makes those devices that much more useful.  One of the most exciting of these is Medkenya which is essentially the same as WebMD here in the states.  It provides information and resources to people that would never have had them in the past.

By encouraging the rapid spread of smartphone usage in Africa it is not unreasonable to think more apps could be developed to help prevent the spread of infectious diseases or maybe even an HIV-testing peripheral that would do wonders to help slow the spread of that terrible disease.

We already take a lot of technology for granted in the US, and that is understandable.  We use our phones for games, and news, and sports scores, and even to buy our coffee at Starbucks now.  The difference for the people in these developing countries is that his technology can save their lives quite literally by providing medical assistance at a level they never would have had without smartphones.  This idea is summed up quite well by Dr. Bitange Ndemo, Kenya’s Minister of Information and Communication:

In the beginning of the 21st century, the mobile telephone was the reserve of an elite few and the gadget’s sole purpose was to make phone calls and send text messages. Today, all this has changed and the mobile phone is no longer a luxury but a necessity. By morphing and adopting into various aspects of our lives, the mobile phone has gone beyond its original purpose of phone calls and text messages and it now serves as a bank, a computer a radio and a television set among other things. In a nutshell, it has penetrated every aspect of our lives.

Personally, I have never seen a cell phone as a necessity despite the fact that I have one and really value all of the features that it gives me.  The difference is that I live somewhere with plenty of doctors and hospitals, and everything else I could ever want.  These inexpensive cellphones are providing an improvement in the quality of life for these people that would otherwise take decades more of development.

August 26, 2011 I Written By

Amazon Offering Textbook Rental on the Kindle

Unless you have exceptional athletic ability or wealthy parents, college is an extremely expensive adventure.  My large student loans that I will be paying on for the next decade or two can verify that if you have any doubt.  I can only imagine how bad it must be for medical students.

One of the most annoying expenses is the exorbitant price of textbooks.  I am pretty sure every college student has paid $100+ for a textbook that they didn’t even open, but were required to buy.  Then you go to sell the book back, and they offer you a whopping $10.  Well, at least you can buy lunch.

One of my greatest discoveries in college was the ability to buy, and sell, used textbooks on Amazon.  This saved me tons of money throughout my years, but I was still stuck with books that I would never use again that weren’t worth the postage to mail back.  They now have a new feature that makes life better on both ends.

Tens of thousands of textbooks are now available through the launch of Kindle Textbook Rental.  Through this program students can rent textbooks for anywhere from 30 to 360 days.  For shorter periods they can save 80% off the print list price. The rental period can be extended at anytime for a period as short as a day, or even buy the book at anytime.

Some of the cool features are that you can make margin notes and highlights that you can save even after your rental period ends.  Should you decide to rent the book again all of your notes will be retained through Whispersync technology on the Amazon Cloud.

Kindle textbooks are also available through the free Kindle apps available on PC, Mac, Apple devices, Windows phone, Android, and Blackberry devices.  That means that students can access their textbooks from pretty much anywhere.

For more information the press release can be found here, or you can go straight to their website at

July 20, 2011 I Written By

Microsoft’s HealthVault Now Going Mobile

The full press release can be found here, and there are some great screen shots at this website, but here are my thoughts on the release.

After essentially leading the early years of the computer age Microsoft appears to be consistently playing catch-up.  They have chased after the ideas of others for years now.  The best example probably being the development of Bing trying to catch up with Google.

I find it amusing that they are now announcing the release of HealthVault to the mobile market as if they are the first company to release to the mobile market.  It looks like a worthwhile app, and has some great value in the long run, but it never ceases to amuse me how Microsoft always feels like they are the top dog in everything when they are actually just following a trend.  End rant.

As for the app itself there are some very interesting aspects.

The first being simply the mobile availability of features.  It is very convenient for people to carry their personal health record in their pocket.  This would allow patients to look up their medical history when filling out forms, and tell doctors exactly what they have been taking or been diagnosed with in the past.

Right now it is only available on Windows Phone 7, but that it should be available on the Apple iOS and Google Android in the coming weeks.  They have also built in client libraries to allow for the development of related apps.  The first one, Health Guard by Akvelon is already available on the WP7 marketplace.

HealthVault does a good job of translating CCR and CCD files into the PHR which is convenient since that is what most doctors are starting to use as they work towards attaining Meaningful Use.  The sheer convenience of this inputting method should help drive their product.  Users will still have the option to input manually, and anything that is not recognized will default to a manual input, but the more automation involved the more likely people will be to adopt it.

Maybe the most interesting aspect of the release is the ability to use Facebook to access the site.  By using your Facebook credentials you can populate the sign up form take advantage of what HealthVault has to offer.  With the amount of people that think of Facebook as the internet and how it drives their lives, this makes tons of sense.  They did emphasize that there will be no flow of information from HealthVault back to Facebook, but that if they ever were to develop such apps they would not be implemented without the express permission of users.

This really brings up an interesting discussion about EHR/EMR/PHR and social networking.  This was addressed in a video done by the founder of emrandhipaa.com which can be found here.  I don’t think we will be seeing people’s health records end up on their wall or anything, but I do think we will start to see apps that more widely cover our personal healthcare and take advantage of the power of Facebook.

June 8, 2011 I Written By

Medic Mobile Announces First SIM Application for Healthcare

When we think of applications for cell phones we immediately think of smartphones, or even the new tablets that are becoming so popular.  However, just think about how much more powerful an app would be if it could be used on normal phones too.  That is exactly what the people from Medic Mobile have done by developing the first SIM app for healthcare.

SIM apps can operate on 80 percent of the world’s phones.  This includes powerful Android phones or iPhones, but also a run of the mill $15 handset.  The magnitude of this development just blows me away.  In most of the developed world smartphones are everywhere, and there will only be more as time goes on.  However, most people in less developed countries can’t generally afford these much more expensive devices.

This development will allow these less fortunate people to take advantage of all the amazing opportunities that technology provides.

You can find the complete press release here, but here are some of the interesting quotes:

“In healthcare, it’s necessary to exchange structured information. SIM apps provide a new method with great potential that can be installed and updated remotely over the air,” says CTO and Lead Developer Dieterich Lawson.

Medic’s first official SIM app is Kuvela, developed for PSI with support from the Maternal Health Task Force, and the company plans to develop many more. “We required reporting tools that can be rolled out at large scale for low cost. The combination of a SIM application and a reporting dashboard will allow us to closely monitor the quality of our program across multiple districts. This would’ve been otherwise impossible without Medic Mobile’s work,” said Gunther Baugh, Project Coordinator for PSI.

“People get excited about the iPhone apps because of profit potential. We’re excited about designing SIM applications because of the impact potential,” says Nesbit. “I can imagine all eight million global community health workers utilizing SIM applications to support their work and improve the lives of their patients.”

June 7, 2011 I Written By

Are Smartphones Killing PC’s?

How the smartphone is killing the PC - The Guardian http://bit.ly/j0T1ib
via Visibli
Tikki Gee

This isn’t directed totally at healthcare, but does address some things that I have talked about in the past.  It does make some interesting points about the power of smartphones compared to computers of the past.  I don’t think PC’s are as much on the way out as the author of the article, but I definitely think smartphones are just at the beginning of their growth.  They mention in the article that PC sells are still increasing though at a slow rate.  There are just too many things that are more convenient on a PC that they will be around for a long long time.  I would like to see more interface between the two but even what exists already is pretty convenient.

June 6, 2011 I Written By

CDC Flu App Challenge Submission: Child Flu HQ

About a month ago I wrote about the CDC Flu App Challenge which encouraged developers to use all of the new technology out there to develop an app that helped educate people on flu prevention and treatment.  The competition stopped accepting submissions last week, but I found one of the submissions that looks interesting.  From their submission website:

Child Flu HQ is a mobile application designed help keep parents educated and informed on the best ways to keep their children away from the flu. The applications, available on iTunes and the Android market (coming soon), are focused on pediatric flu education, and allow parents to personalize the application to their specific child.  Child Flu HQ then sends regular reminders and information to the parent with push notifications.  Information is directed to the parent from both physician resources as well as from the CDC.  The app also addressed the need of the physician who is confronted with a child with possible influenza. The App uses the CDC RSS Feed of Influenza updates, as well as the RSS Feed of Influenza podcasts.  Additionally, the App intends to use some CDC video content as well.

You can also find screenshots on the above website.

May 30, 2011 I Written By



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