Here in NYC, the major success envy story for eHealthy entrepreneurs has been doctor appointment-setting website ZocDoc. With multiple rounds of funding from the likes of Goldman Sachs, it’s appeared to have unassailable ‘cred’ and ownership on a national basis. Cleveland Ohio-based NaviGo Health wants to cut a small and specialized slice of this pie through using a ‘dating model’ process. (This Editor wondered “why didn’t I think of that?”) Their platform CompassMD matches newly diagnosed cancer patients with doctors, based on how both parties answer a list of questions based on communication, decision-making, treatment and personality preferences. The founders are working out of co-working space at a Shaker Heights Ohio accelerator, LaunchHouse (built in a 1950s car dealership!), and on ‘FFF’ money attempting to snag a pilot. The website’s a home page, they tweet at @navigohealth. Can a few docs out there lend them a hand on their pilot? Maybe some crowdfunding and Health 2.0 folks to the rescue? Compatability (sic) matters: NaviGo Health puts an online dating-style twist on physician searching (MedCityNews)
VA distributing iPads to Family Caregivers (US)
Back in May 2012 we noted a Veterans Affairs (VA) program for 2013 that would distribute 1,000 iPads to primary caregivers of seriously wounded veterans to facilitate care delivery and data transfer. Then called ‘Clinic-In-Hand’, it is now officially debuting as the Family Caregiver Pilot for caregivers of seriously injured post-9/11 veterans already enrolled in VA’s Family Caregiver Program. The intent is now more clearly focused on reducing caregiver stress, via pre-loaded apps to share health information, coach patients through chronic pain and PTSD and serve up tools such as reminders and a health journal. A second, the Veteran Appointment Request Web App Pilot, facilitates appointment setting via mobile or desktop PCs for a separate test group of 600 veterans and was launched at the Washington, D.C. VA Medical Center and VA Palo Alto (California) Health Care System. According to EHR Intelligence, if successful it will be rolled out to all patients at these two VA centers with a system rollout in the future–complicated by the fact that every VA center has a different scheduling system. Meanwhile, VA’s VistA and the DOD’s AHLTA still don’t talk to each other. VA integrates mHealth into daily care, gives iPads to vets (EHR Intelligence); VA Mobile Health release (for additional details go to the left hand drop-down menu). Hat tip to Contributing Editor Charles Lowe.
Hospitals can benefit from telemonitoring (US)
As someone who has spent a huge amount of time attempting to persuade acute trusts in the UK that telehealth is in their interests (with, I’m glad to say, a modicum of success more recently) it is good to see this paper entitled in the July 2013 edition of the Journal of Telemedicine & e-Health (freely accessible). The key finding is (more…)
Apple-ologists discern ‘new’ interest in health tech and telehealth
With the same obsession that Kremlinologists had during the Cold War, the Apple-ologists at 9to5Mac divine that Apple is now suddenly interested in the sensor-based fitness sector of telehealth. Recent remarks by their CEO have been examined like the mutterings of the Oracles at Delphi. Their SVP of Technologies has been spotted wearing a Nike FuelBand, just like the CEO–and by looking at his picture, he does need it! Apple Marketing folks have been examining wearables like the Jawbone UP! (naturally as competition, duh!) Far more indicative from their sources: An all-star team from semiconductors to batteries to sensors is working in secrecy on the long-awaited iWatch. Talent’s been snatched from telehealth sensor companies AccuVein (vein mapping), the recently defunct C8 MediSensors (blood monitoring), and Senseonics (embedded sensor for blood glucose). And they are most interested in sleep tracking. iWatch’s novelty emerges as Apple taps sensor and fitness experts
Apple’s been interested all along in healthcare–and others have been interested in Apple
No surprise to TTA readers, as you’ve been tracking Apple’s and competition’s healthcare moves along with us from the start.
- the iPad in hospitals and their preliminary tests starting in early 2011 when tablets were new and untried [TTA 8 Feb 2011]
- Editor Steve on the Apple Smart Shoe US Patent application back in January
- Samsung’s hype on healthcare devices and software on the new Galaxy S4–fitness tracking disruptor?
- 5.5 million plus of health app downloads (US) from the App Store (May)
- the development of many devices that are based on the iPhone (Misfit Shine, AliveCor‘s ECG, the Ozcan microscope and food testers only a few)
- …though Microsoft’s Surface for healthcare back in February is likely a dud–MS just wrote off $900 million with the Surface RT, lowered its price (though only a fool with money to burn would buy it) and the Pro continues to struggle (ZDNet)
Smartwatches as the 2013-2014 tablet…and will they knock out fitness bands?
But this press focus on ‘Apple for Health’ does disguise that Apple is behind the curve, not leading it, on the watch form factor. Just like the Soviets, Apple better get a move-on or lose the race that gets serious next year. Smartwatches are fast becoming the new tablet [TTA 2 July]. One rosy industry estimate has 5 million units sold by end of 2014 (Canalys Research in Gigaom). Sony’s been there for awhile. Pebble sold 275,000 pre-orders through Kickstarter, their web store and now retail through Best Buy. This week the rumor broke among the Microsoft-ologists that they are working on an aluminum smartwatch with a 1.5-inch screen and a band out of Star Trek IV. (The comments below the TechCrunch article on the very thought of smartwatches are a good chuckle!) And undoubtedly looking over their shoulder because they’re gaining on you, contrary to Satchel Paige’s advice, are Fitbit, Jawbone and Nike, wondering if they’ll be the next Zeo.
App platforms & mobile devices: what’s hot and what’s not (free report)
Readers might be interested in an excellent free report entitled “Developer Economics 3Q 2013: State of the Developer Nation” produced by VisionMobile. Based on a survey of 6,000+ respondents from 115 countries it charts the fortunes of the different app platforms, and of the hardware suppliers on which those apps sit.
Just one quote to whet your appetite:”2013 presents an inflexion point in the evolution of app ecosystems.”
Many thanks to Professor Mike Short for the pointer.
The future of Telehealth & Telecare Aware
As from today I, Editor Steve, am retiring from the Telehealth & Telecare Aware editorial team. After giving it my continuous attention for eight years it is time for me to focus on my other interests such as promoting my PowerPoint addins and nurturing my fledgling web design business. From now on I shall only be helping with the tech side of running the site.
I therefore thank you, loyal readers, whose comments and communications have kept me going during these years. I’d particularly like to express my appreciation to Tynetec which has advertised with TTA since it started and has never sought to influence editorial policy or content. Thanks too to Eldercare and Air Products for their sustained advertising support in recent years.
I have very special thanks, of course, for Donna Cusano for the amount of time that she has also put in since 2009 to keep us all up to speed on developments in the US. Without her TTA would have folded several years ago.
So…I am extremely pleased to announce that as I step back Donna has agreed to step forward as TTA’s new Editor in Chief. She will be supported by a number of volunteer contributing editors: Toni Bunting, Chrys Meewella, Mike Burton, Alasdair Morrison and Charles Lowe who will be covering UK developments and introducing their own observations as often seen already in the TANN Ireland and TANN England sites and in comments. My grateful thanks to them too.
I wish Donna and the team every success. They will no doubt set about reinventing and reinvigorating TTA. Donna has already indicated that she would like to shift more towards interpreting trends and that one of the contributing editors has a post for Monday that you will not want to miss!
Best wishes to you all, Ex-editor Steve.
In changing behavior, ‘wanna’ works better than ‘hafta’
Related: Our April discussion of employee wellness programs, Employee wellness: Carrot? Stick? Or something else?
An example of simplification helping to increase positive behavior–and perhaps outcomes–is the recent study of the Center for Connected Health’s BP Connect program. Mobile users took their blood pressure more often than the telephone hub/device users; these older users (median age 61!) found the mobile version both easier and more convenient in portability. Overall BP scores went down moderately. Connected Health Study Finds Mobile Health Improves Patient Engagement (HIT Consultant)
Google Glass through a doctor’s eyes
John Halamka, MD, CTO of Beth Israel Deaconess Hospital in Boston, writes about his experience testing Glass in the clinical environment and sees five useful areas–documentation, alerts and reminders, ED dashboards supplementing or displacing tablets, decision support (Watson, anyone?) “Just as the iPad has become the chosen form factor for clinicians today, I can definitely see a day when computing devices are more integrated into the clothing or body of the clinician.” Not the Object of Evil painted by the consumer IT gearheads and privacy advocates. Perhaps an ideal place for this? But is this Editor the only one who finds that ‘Meaningful Use Stage 2’ compliance (assistive technology) in the #1 position a bit odd? The Health Care Blog (Health 2.0) Hat tip to reader Bob Pyke via LinkedIn.
Is health IT funding hot and not just warm?
Mercom Capital Group has also been on the trail health IT/digital health investment trends–we last looked at their 2012 report in January— and finds the opposite from the mid-year ‘warm not hot’ RockHealth digital health investment report [TTA 9 July]. They see sizzle in the $1.1 billion invested to date ($623 million in 2nd Quarter alone) in 272 deals done, versus RockHealth’s $849 million. This may all be in the definitions and the composition of companies surveyed–they had commonality on only two of the five leading deals (the leading deal for both was Proteus, the other was Watermark). Mercom is also predicting a bullish $2 billion this year which would double their 2012 market total ($200 million lower than RockHealth’s). They both see a shift from practice-focused to consumer-focused technologies–and the concentration in deals by 11 funders. Executive summary, announcement, FierceHealthIT article.
Related: A sobering article in Wired depicts the ‘series A crunch’ affecting now over-valued Silicon Valley tech startups moving from overly generous angel and private investors to hard-nosed venture capital companies. Part of the problem is, ironically, accelerators, which polish start-up founders’ presentation and business planning skills to the point where they look better than they should to angels, and perhaps get more than they should. Investors are still ‘dabbling in digital health’ (RockHealth’s POV), and that may actually be…healthy. A Fleet Street (or NY Post)-worthy lurid headline: The Screams of Crushed Startups Echo Across Silicon Valley
Tele-monitored rowing team breaks record (UK)
Last month [here] we reported on inHealthcare’s sponsorship of a team in the gruelling GB ROW 2013 race fundraising event, where six crews of four people row 2000 miles around Britain. Now we are pleased to report that their team broke the record and partly attributed their success to the monitoring: Inhealthcare helps rowing team clinch world record.
Dementia rates in UK fell over 20 years
A report in GP Online about a Medical Research Council (MRC) study published in the Lancet raises questions about what lies behind a 24% lower rate of dementia in older people in 2011 than was predicted by a previous study. Dementia rates ‘falling in UK’, research shows.
End of life care: emotions and facts (UK)
Not telehealth directly but of concern to those in the field because of the links to people with long term conditions…
While the UK media is leaping on the current ‘bash the Liverpool Care Pathway’ bandwaggon, the end of life care experts at King’s College’s Cicely Saunders Institute have taken a more balanced view. In an insightful 30 minute podcast members of their team discuss questions such as:
- What is the problem the LCP review tried to address?
- What are the known research facts?
- What can people do in advance of when they are no longer able to make decisions?
- What are the implications for professional training?
- What are the funding and practical inequities in the current health system?
- What is the cost of care to families?
KCL press release here. Podcast here. Related TTA item, May 2013.
DiscoverIP: first global patent search portal with mobile access
Knowing who has patented what previously is a perpetual headache for developers of new devices. Now, CambridgeIP, a provider of online patent search has produced an app so that you can run searches on your phone. We are not sure why you would not want to use a desktop machine for such searches, but we guess they know their customers best! DiscoverIP.
Funding: the concentration continues
The funding concentration trend apparent in RockHealth’s latest survey [TTA 9 July] is not contradicted by latest bits of news:
- PracticeFusion, a free physician, web-based and ad supported EMR, is rumored to be raising $60 million from what Venture Beat last week termed “a New York-based investment firm, not one of the usual (local) Silicon Valley suspects.” Now we can suppose that sources would be silent unless the deal was signed, sealed and delivered. The leaks can also be strategic ones. (PracticeFusion has also introduced PatientFusion, a PHR with added functions of booking appointments and leaving doctor feedback–which puts it squarely in ZocDoc’s increasingly challenged, but extremely well-funded territory. (We advise them to put aside a few dollars for the inevitable MMRGlobal challenge as well.) Having raised $34 million less than one year ago, the funding is clearly going to updating ‘Meaningful Use’ requirements, the patient portal and to be determined growth.
- Chicago-based Caremerge just raised $2.1 million for its mobile apps for coordination of long term care (LTC) between providers, doctors and families. (MedCityNews) It claims to be the first-ever integrated mobile and web solutions provider for this market. It does answer a crying, not-terribly-glamourous need in senior care, and it’s also interesting that two of the key investors are from Poland and Switzerland. But Caremerge has deep roots in GE-land: one of its founders came from GE Healthcare IT Solutions and it’s currently part of the StartUp Health/GE Healthymagination program–which accepts only companies further along in their development for their $250 million fund, and takes a generous slice of equity for advisory services rendered. [TTA 10 Jan, 7 March, 4 April]
- Health tech accelerator Blueprint Health announced its latest class–and they are increasingly not in the earlier pattern of true startups in need of guidance to appeal to angels and VCs. Five of the ten companies already have customers, versus two in the previous class. Is this mission creep? According to an article in Gigaom, their co-founder has said that they are not deliberately looking for more ‘mature’ companies, but are nonetheless accepting them. Of course, early stage companies that have already gotten into the market have a greater chance of success and look better on the record of any accelerator program. Another trend is B2B rules. Only one of the picks is consumer focused (health coaching) and another is engaged in employee wellness rewards adopted by companies.
Are these pointers to the future, at least in the US?
- Nascent maturity and realism in business plans–the horizon narrowing
- The continued collapse of practice EHRs into a few trusted providers [Doctor backlash brewing, TTA 22 Feb]
- With less funding to go around, and with few companies moving from A to B to C rounds, will future investment and development go to those who have already gained traction in customers and previous investment–and somehow got to that stage with the help of angels and crowdfunding?
- Is it the end of the Quantified Self consumer device buzz? These investments, and the past quarter’s, are largely in the surer, more VC-acceptable water of B2B tech.
Mick’s House: Telecare publicity with a difference (UK)
New York, New York, it’s a health tech town (Part 3/wrapup)
Part 3: When is a Summit only a hill? And The Pioneers overload the Conestoga Wagons.
(Disclosure: TTA was a media partner of DHS at CEWeek. We also remain a proud sponsor of and provide volunteer services for Health 2.0 NYC, the presenter of Healthcare Pioneers. Our readers should know that these relationships do not exclude this Editor from noting the thick and thin of both events, not rendered in pale pastels.)
Digital Health Summit @ CEWeek
Four floors up from a busy show floor, and after interviewing Tal Givoly, CEO and Oren Fuerst, PhD, Executive Chairman, of startup health information company Medivizor (Part 2), assistants moved attendees into the room for the start of the New York/CEWeek edition of the Digital Health Summit at 11:30 am. It opened with a fairly anodyne presentation by the Executive Director of the NYC Economic Development Corporation (NYCEDC), (more…)







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