Posts for Tag: health Care

Your Phone Can Tell When You're Down and Alert Your Caregivers

Your smartphone is an incredibly powerful tool—one that we mostly waste by just using to make phone calls and check email. But in addition to that, it’s an advanced bundle of sensors that is with us nearly 24 hours a day, collecting massive amounts of data. Doctors and health professionals are starting to understand the opportunity this data can provide. Take a new app that helps silently identify diabetes patients who might be slipping with their treatments.

Just when I said I hadn't heard much about apps aimed at diabetes, along comes this news about Ginger.io. The app senses a user's mood and alerts a network of caregivers. Seems brilliant and useful. I wonder when it will be adapted to other conditions.

Glooko Enlists the iPhone For Managing Your Diabetes

And with Glooko's logbook app and MeterSync cable, your iOS device can become an effective tool for spotting trends and managing the condition.

The $40 sync cable tethers to your iPhone or iPod Touch's dock connector, automatically downloading blood sugar readings from six of the most popular blood glucose meters from Bayer, OneTouch and FreeStyle. The cable works in conjunction with the free Glooko app which not only keeps track of when the reading was taken, but also allows you to add pertinent notes about how you were feeling at the time, your level of physical activity, or what you had recently eaten.

All of this detailed information can be then be used to spot trends or patterns when viewing your readings over time, which can help a diabetic better manage their blood glucose levels. And when it's time to visit the doctor, the app even lets you email or fax a fourteen day report to your practitioner so they can see how you've been doing the past couple of weeks.

Don't think I'e seen an app for managing diabetes before...

On to the Future

In another amazing coincidence, Frank Moss published an op-ed piece on medical technologyin the New York Times on the same day that David Pogue wrote about Jawbone's Up bracelet.

Moss opened his piece with a simple question

WHY can’t Americans tap into the ingenuity that put men on the moon, created the Internet and sequenced the human genome to revitalize our economy?

and provides a confident answer

I’m convinced we can. We are in the early phases of the next big technology-driven revolution, which I call “consumer health.” When fully unleashed, it could radically cut health care costs and become a huge global growth market.

He describes

a “digital nervous system”: inconspicuous wireless sensors worn on your body and placed in your home would continuously monitor your vital signs and track the daily activities that affect your health, counting the number of steps you take and the quantity and quality of food you eat. Wristbands would measure your levels of arousal, attention and anxiety. Bandages would monitor cuts for infection. Your bathroom mirror would calculate your heart rate, blood pressure and oxygen level.

It's odd that he imagines that wristband as Pogue writes about

 the Up wristband ($100). The tiny motion sensors inside are designed to monitor your activity and sleep, and, by confronting you with a visual record of your habits, inspire you to do better.

I can easily imagine wearing a device like Up, and I think it's too bad that Pogue finds the device wanting. I acknowledge that Moss's vision and imagination see far beyond mine, but I am enthsiastic about reaching a future of better health and improved health care delivery systems. Isn't it cool that we are taking our first steps in that direction now?

 

Jawbone Releases UP, A Wristband For Tracking Your Wellness

"People know more about their iPhone than they do their own health," points out Travis Bogard, Jawbone's VP of product development. "So how do we make them consumers of their own wellness?" Today Jawbone is finally unwrapping their attempt to solve the problem: The UP, a $100 wristband, smartphone app, and web app trio that work together to monitor your exercise habits, sleep cycles, and eating decisions. It's already on sale on Jawbone's website; on November 6th, it'll be available at Apple, Target, AT&T stores, and Best Buy.

What's the potential here? A device like this would probably have done me more good earlier in life, but I like the idea of getting people more engaged with, more aware of their overall wellness.

‘Smart Textiles’ for a Phone as Useful as the Shirt on Your Back

His effort is part of a broad technological effort to make “smart textiles”: wearable fabrics with embedded electronics that can collect, store, send and receive information. His lab is focusing on the sending-and-receiving part, trying to transform military apparel, hospital gowns, even everyday T-shirts into antennas.

From a New York Times article about the work John Volakis is conducting at Ohio State. Some of this seems a little over the top, but I'd welcome apparel that eased the hookup and use of medical monitoring equipment,