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By Jonah Comstock | 09:09 am | June 18, 2014
LG's heart rate sensing earphones use technology licensed from Valencell.
By Aditi Pai | 11:02 am | June 17, 2014
A little over a year after completing a pilot study, pharmaceutical company AstraZeneca and Exco InTouch have launched a mobile-enabled program in the UK to help patients manage their chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), called Me&MyCOPD. The program has three components -- a portal in which patients can connect with providers, a server on which information is saved and messages are schedules, and an app that the patient can use. Patients can use the program to track their condition, add data from medical devices, manage clinic visits, and view information on how to deal with different lifestyle issues. “Me&MyCOPD will help patients to better control their condition and healthcare providers to make more informed decisions, tailoring care pathways to each patient’s individual needs," Exco InTouch Director of Product Strategy Mark Brincat said in a statement. "This translates into improving patient welfare and their quality of life by reducing the number of unplanned hospital admissions and the frequency and severity of exacerbations, decreasing the overall treatment costs at the same time.”  The program will use this data to better understand what patients need and to give them personal goals and management tools to better handle their condition. Because physicians will have real-time access to patients’ data, they will also be able to monitor the patient's adherence to treatment regimens and reach out to the patient if their condition worsens. The pilot, which was completed in the UK in March 2013, was administered through several National Health Service Clinical Commissioning Groups and funded by AstraZeneca, with Exco InTouch providing the technology and outreach to providers. In the trial, patients also used a Bluetooth-enabled inhaler, offered by AstraZeneca, that automatically reported data to the app.
By Jonah Comstock | 10:30 am | June 17, 2014
Vidscrip, a Minneapolis-based patient engagement startup, has inked a deal to provide its video-making software to physicians across Partners Healthcare in Boston.
By Aditi Pai | 10:20 am | June 17, 2014
WebMD updated its consumer-facing health app this week: it now integrates a user's biometric data from certain activity trackers, wireless scales, and glucose meters.
By Jonah Comstock | 09:52 am | June 17, 2014
San Francisco-based Augmedix, one of several startups developing Google Glass software and modifications for hospital use cases, has raised $7.
By Brian Dolan | 09:36 am | June 17, 2014
On Sunday giant medical device company Medtronic entered into a definitive agreement to acquire another big medical device company, Covidien, for $42.
By Brian Dolan | 10:49 am | June 16, 2014
As MobiHealthNews noted last week in the introduction to our In-Depth report on Apple's Health app feature set, the FDA made a rare move on Wednesday by adding a new description for a type of mobile medical app that it would not regulate as a medical device.
By Aditi Pai | 10:25 am | June 16, 2014
Four months after pregnancy tracking app developer Wildflower Health launched a program for Wyoming Medicaid beneficiaries, the startup reported that nearly 70 percent of enrollees are using the app's main features.
By Jonah Comstock | 09:21 am | June 16, 2014
The Dexcom G4 was the continuous glucose monitor used in the study.
By Aditi Pai | 07:14 am | June 16, 2014
Activity tracker shipments reached 2.