-
Recent Posts
- Synergistic Impacts of Healthcare and Social Media: An Observational Study
- Five Things Healthcare Can Learn from Project Management
- Remote Patient Monitoring will Lead Value-Based Healthcare
- Five Imperatives of Patient-Centric Healthcare
- #DigitalHealth: Remote Patient Monitoring Part 3: The Ideal RPM System
Archives
Categories
- child abuse
- clinical trials
- digital health
- disaster relief
- education
- Election 2012
- emergency medicine
- FDA
- fitness
- health insurance
- healthcare economics
- Healthcare IT
- healthcare reform
- healthcare vendors
- homeless
- Implantable Defibrillators
- informatics
- IT security
- malpractice law
- media coverage
- medical apps
- medical devices
- medical education
- mHealth
- mobile health
- mobile health clinic
- music
- nutrition
- pharma
- politics
- psychology
- remote patient monitoring
- smartphone apps
- statistics
- sudden cardiac arrest
- technology
- telehealth
- travel
- Uncategorized
- wireless health
Meta
- Register
- Log in
- Entries RSS
- Comments RSS
- WordPress.com
Category Archives: smartphone apps
The Future of Medical Apps: A Call to Arms For the End of Flimsy Science
A recent article in the Washington Post raises concerns about the legitimacy of mobile health apps. As Chair of the committee which developed Draft Standards for the Happtique App Certification Program, I applaud the author for taking a critical look … Continue reading
About these ads
Posted in clinical trials, digital health, FDA, healthcare economics, medical apps, medical devices, mHealth, mobile health, smartphone apps, technology, telehealth, wireless health
Tagged FDA, hcsm, medical apps, Medicare, medicine, mHealth, mobile health, smartphone apps, technology, wireless health
4 Comments
Current State of mHealth: Anatomy of a Survey
A well-conducted survey on the use of cell phones for healthcare was released yesterday by the Pew Internet and American Life Project. The study was conducted in August-September of 2012. I will review some of the major and more interesting … Continue reading
Posted in medical apps, mHealth, mobile health, smartphone apps, wireless health
Tagged EHR, hcsm, healthcare reform, medical apps, mHealth, mobile health, S4PM, smartphone apps, wireless health
Leave a comment
The FDA and Medical Apps: Where are We?
In a previous post on this site I discussed my reasons for endorsing FDA oversight of mobile medical apps. Since we are nearing a final decision by the FDA concerning the matter, I thought it fitting to bring it to … Continue reading
Five Ways to Evaluate Mobile Medical Apps via Research
There are many barriers to the adoption of health, fitness, and medical apps. A recent article summarizing the report from PWC’s Global Healthcare division states that adoption of mHealth technologies will lag consumer demand. I wholeheartedly agree with David Levy, … Continue reading
Five Essentials to Having Your Hospital Go Mobile
While most hospitals’ IT priorities presently reside in achieving Meaningful Use and getting up to speed with ICD-10 (even though both have been moving deadline targets), there is another issue which is important to not only CIOs but to healthcare … Continue reading
Posted in digital health, FDA, healthcare economics, Healthcare IT, healthcare reform, healthcare vendors, informatics, IT security, mHealth, mobile health, mobile health clinic, smartphone apps, technology, wireless health
Tagged ACOs, EHR, government IT, healthcare economics, healthcare IT, healthcare vendor, hospitals, mHealth, mobile health, S4PM, smartphone apps, wireless health
Leave a comment
Five Reasons why Medical Apps Will Want to Undergo Certification
A draft of standards for a health and medical app certification program was released yesterday by Happtique. As a matter of disclosure I am proud to have been the Chair of the panel that drafted these standards. The standards are … Continue reading
Five Creative and Necessary Ways of Getting Medical Apps Adopted
Medical apps will likely become an important healthcare tool. Once barriers such as reimbursement and regulatory issues are fully addressed there are many ways in which app developers and their commercial partners can penetrate the healthcare market. However, there are … Continue reading
Posted in digital health, education, FDA, fitness, health insurance, healthcare economics, Healthcare IT, healthcare reform, medical apps, mHealth, smartphone apps, wireless health
Tagged ACOs, EHR, EMR, government IT, hcsm, healthcare, healthcare economics, healthcare IT, healthcare reform, hospitals, mHealth, smartphone apps, technology, wireless health
1 Comment
Five Reasons Why Physicians Will Resist Prescribing Medical Apps
The Jackson Coker Special Report on Apps, Doctors, and Digital Devices, originally published in October 2011, was featured in an online article today with the headline “80% of Doctors Use Smart phones and Medical Apps in Everyday Medical Practice.” If … Continue reading
Posted in digital health, healthcare reform, informatics, medical apps, mHealth, mobile health, pharma, smartphone apps, statistics, technology, telehealth, wireless health
Tagged ACOs, EHR, government IT, hcsm, healthcare, healthcare economics, healthcare finance, healthcare IT, healthcare reform, Medicare, mHealth, mobile health, S4PM, smartphone apps, technology, wireless health
Leave a comment
Five Reasons Why mHealth is Not Going Away (Despite the Hype-Haters)
One feels almost assaulted by financial projections of the mHealth market every day. Extrapolations from the increasing use of smartphones, the use of iPads by physicians, the adoption of patient portals by insurers, research of the Internet for medical purposes … Continue reading
Posted in clinical trials, digital health, healthcare economics, Healthcare IT, healthcare reform, medical apps, mobile health, smartphone apps, technology, telehealth, wireless health
Tagged ACOs, EHR, hcsm, healthcare IT, healthcare reform, mHealth, mobile health, technology, wireless health
1 Comment
Five Ways to get Congress Moving on Mobile Medical App Guidance
As many of the readers of this blog know by now, the FDA draft guidance on mobile medical apps was released on July 19, 2011. While there are those who believe that FDA involvement in the regulation of … Continue reading
Posted in digital health, Election 2012, FDA, health insurance, healthcare reform, medical apps, mHealth, mobile health, politics, smartphone apps
Tagged EHR, hcsm, healthcare reform, Medicare, mHealth, S4PM, technology, telehealth, wireless health
Leave a comment