That
phone app keeping track of your exercise and meals might keep you out of the
hospital one day.
Why give your doctors permission to
incorporate data from fitness trackers and health apps into electronic patient
records?
Well, they might spot signs of an ailment sooner and suggest
behavioral changes or medication before you land in the emergency room.
They
also might be able to monitor how you're healing from surgery or whether you're
following a treatment regimen.
Right now we only see our patients for
about a 15-minute visit in the office, and it's a very constricted view. This
really globalizes the view of their health status, so that we're really in
contact with them on a much more daily if not hour-to-hour basis. It's almost
like a virtual house call.
As a matter of fact, in several clinics around the USA,
a handful of patients at risk for heart failure are asked to use a fitness
tracker to count steps walked and flights climbed.
They
are also asked to record what they eat — by photographing the product's bar
code, for instance — using a phone app that has a database containing nutrition
information on thousands of food items.
Using
Apple's new HealthKit technology, data from the various trackers and apps gets
automatically transferred to the Epic MyChart app on the iPhone. From there,
the information goes to the hospital's records system, which also comes from
Epic.
I would like to see more patients start
tracking blood pressure and sleep quality, too.
But
we doctors first need to ensure that teams are in place to review the glut of
data coming in.
More
broadly, there are consumer privacy and security issues to address, along with
questions about whether these trackers and apps really improve patient care.
The
University of California, San Francisco is studying which gadgets are reliable
and whether that reliability extends to patients with extreme conditions. Then
they have to figure out what information is really meaningful — not just noise.
Many doctors and hospitals see potential.
The Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, uses Fitbit trackers to monitor
hip-replacement patients for a month after surgery.
Health
workers get data on daily steps and can tell when patients have trouble walking
— a hundred or more miles away.
The
Ochsner Health System in New Orleans is turning to wireless scales and
blood-pressure devices to help reduce readmissions for chronic diseases such as
heart failure.
Noticing
a small weight gain, for instance, might reveal fluid buildup resulting from
the heart failing to pump normally.
Not only can doctors intervene sooner, they
can use the data to show how exercise can help lower blood pressure.
If we're going to succeed in improving
health, we have to get patients more engaged in their care.
Heart-attack patients have long been
asked to weigh themselves, while those with diabetes have had to check glucose
levels. Smartphone technology makes all that easier and gets measurements to
doctors more regularly and reliably. There's no forgetting to record a number
or transposing digits.
With Apple's HealthKit tools, disparate
gadgets and records systems can work together more easily. Think of HealthKit
as a common language, eliminating the need for translators.
Beyond
sleep and exercise data coming from fitness trackers, doctors can eventually
incorporate devices that measure glucose, blood pressure, respiratory rates and
blood-oxygen levels.
The
devices communicate with the iPhone wirelessly or through the headphone or
charging port.
Google, Samsung and Microsoft have similar ambitions that will
expand monitoring to users of Android and Windows phones, though they aren't as
far along.
For
now, developers must write separate code for each Android or Windows app to
integrate.
Even if I did not do a single thing with
the information, just the patient knowing that I'm reviewing it will already
have a positive effect.
An example, pedometers may made people
walk every day and move on and get going.
Apps and trackers could ultimately reduce
patient visits, though there's a risk patients would practice self-care.
Please remember always that, all these
devices may be aids or tools to help us doctors deliver better care, but they
are just tools.
They should NEVER substitute for a face-to-face visit.
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