Cerner and Athenahealth say integrating
with Apple's mobile health service
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[September 19, 2014]
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Cerner
Corp and Athenahealth Inc, two leading U.S. electronic health record
providers, said on Thursday they are working with Apple Inc to develop
applications that leverage Apple's mobile health service HealthKit.
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Cerner and Athenahealth representatives said they are building
integrations with HealthKit and working with Apple. Previously,
Apple announced a partnership with rival electronic health record
company Epic Systems. Apple did not respond to a request for
comment.
The goal is to help doctors monitor patients with chronic conditions
from home and identify health risks. HealthKit gathers data from
various applications and devices, including blood pressure cuffs,
accelerometers and glucose measurement systems, and makes it easier
for doctors to view it all in one place.
Across the United States, hospitals are rolling out pilots using
HealthKit to improve preventative care, and potentially cut costs.
Cerner, Epic and Athenahealth are central to these plans, as the
patient-generated data is ultimately stored in the electronic health
record.
Both Athenahealth and Cerner have developed mobile applications
targeted at patients. HealthKit-compatible versions of these apps
will be available on the App Store when Apple fixes a bug that
forced health developers to pull their apps on Wednesday.
Apple said it was working to address the bug. The HealthKit apps
will be available by the end of the month.
An Apple spokesperson did not respond to a request for comment on
Thursday about the company's new HealthKit partners.
Athenahealth vice president Abbe Don said the company will use
HealthKit to help patients with chronic conditions like diabetes.
Cerner senior director Brian Carter said care teams, including
doctors and nurses, will be able to access data from HealthKit with
patients' consent.
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Carter said they will work closely with "focused smaller
organizations" to prove the value of the service. He said the
initial integration will focus on wellness and preventing the onset
of chronic conditions.
Athenahealth's Don said the company will test its "proof of concept"
application with one client, Hudson Headwaters Health Network, a
non-profit health center based in New York. Don said medical device
makers are also working on HealthKit integrations for use in early
trials.
"There is an awful lot we can do with HealthKit," she said.
(Reporting by Christina Farr; Editing by Lisa Shumaker and Cynthia
Osterman)
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