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Posted on Oct 9, 2013 in News | 0 comments

STDs, HIV & a lack of privacy

With the global focus on personal privacy after the revelation of the PRISM program, an unlikely source of a potential security hazard and it could be in your pocket. Smartphones and apps have become ubiquitous in the modern world with far reaching applications, including apps designed to aid the care and prevention of HIV & other STDs. A letter to the editor in the Journal of Medical Internet Research has highlighted that while apps can offer many benefits, each individual risks exposing a wide range of private information to the creators of the apps through the “permissions” the app requests.

Put simply, an app generally has to “request permission” from the user to access certain features, like calendar, phone book, or GPS location, that maybe necessary for optimum performance. While apps may genuinely need access to location data to make suggestions such as the closest sexual health clinic, the issue of confidentiality arises when the app is not created by a named health professional. With over 100 different permissions requested by apps, it is often overwhelming for the user to understand which apps are accessing what data and the ways there are utilising it.

With the significant social implications for an individual being diagnosed with HIV or contracting a STD, apps that provide information or advice at the expense of personal data being sent to third parties are a significant risk to the user. With recent findings suggesting top health apps are sharing data with up to 70 third parties, user caution is highly advised. The author of the letter advised that user should check to see whether the developed of any HIV/STD app, or any app in general, is a reputable body or health professional. Even after checking, users are urged to only accept the app “permission requests” if they are happy to provide the type of data requested.

Original letter: http://www.jmir.org/2013/10/e222/
Evidon research: http://www.evidon.com/blog/healthy-data-set

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Posted on Jul 16, 2013 in News | 0 comments

mHealth causes a digital diaper change

Pixie Scientific has recently launched an Indiegogo crowd-funded project into developing and marketing ‘smart diapers’ for children. These new nappies feature a square grid and a QR code that allows it to be scanned by a mobile app. This app then decodes the coloured squares and QR code into information regarding the child’s hydration, signs of urinary tract infections and state of their kidney function.

The company hopes that the crowd sourced funding will enable it to kick start manufacturing and also to start the initial research using the technology in a hospital setting. The device will also require FDA approval given its possible use as a diagnostic medical tool.

By tracking several variables over time, the app will keep a digital record of the child’s urine test strip and provide recommendations on whether to seek medical attention. We look forward to the data from the first clinical trial due to start at Benioff Children’s Hospital of the University of California, San Francisco in September . With mHealth, even diapers will be changing with the times!

Links:
1. http://pixiescientific.com/
2. http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/07/09/a-digital-diaper-for-tracking-health/

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Posted on Jun 10, 2013 in News | 0 comments

Making Diabetes management Abriiz

Using the very latest in mobile technology and behavioural psychology, medical solutions provider, Ideomed, has expanded their lineup of innovative tools for the effective management of chronic illnesses to include new options to improve compliance for patients with diabetes. The Abriiz Diabetes Management Platform aims to improve the compliance to treatment of the 25.8 million sufferers of the disease in the US alone, who currently report a full compliance rate of only 55%.

The software platform hopes to use customised reminders, social influence and feedback to improve the effectiveness and adherence of current management plans. Ideomed hopes to duplicate their previous success with this current release.

The JMTM staff are excited by this new development in mHealth targeting chronic diseases and hope to publish quality research covering the application of such solutions in the future.

For further information, please see the Ideomed Media Release.

Link: http://www.ideomed.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/07/AbriizDiabetes.MediaRelease.R5.042313.pdf

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