We had a very productive board meeting this past Friday and have since updated those you who weren’t in attendance. Pasadera Capital presented a compelling picture of the market as well as drafts of dynamic pricing/value models. We left the meeting … Read More
Masonry Blog
Following our recent posts about Apple’s Health app and its integration with Epic, we’ve received some questions on how our own product, Mobius Health, interacts with Apple’s products. In short, Mobius and Health complement each other well. Mobius offers secure communication services that Apple does not, combines sensor data with practice management apps for health care providers, and acquires otherwise inaccessible data using our proprietary devices.
Secure Video Calls and Messaging
While data transmitted through Apple Health is secure, the platform does not provide secure messaging, calling, or live video; Apple’s FaceTime and iMessage do not meet HIPAA security standards. The secure telemedicine features of Mobius Health allow us to fill that void. We offer messaging and video calls to connect medical professionals with their patients and colleagues. The Mobius security protocol exceeds HIPAA standards and ensures patients’ privacy.
Combining Sensors for Meaningful Use
Apple’s Health is a powerful aggregator of data, but the stock app is of limited use to clinicians.
Mobius ties data from Health to apps that help improve the daily workflow of health care providers and their staff. Our Mobius Clinic app makes the smartphone a relevant work tool by automating the patient intake process and vital sign collection and providing a shared practice task management tool.
Mobius Sensors Fill in Apple Gaps
Finally, Mobius can feed the data it gathers into Health (if desired), allowing other HealthKit apps to use that data. The Mobius smartphone accessory pulls readings from sensors that are not directly compatible with Health and makes the information accessible to your other apps. The Mobius accessory can transmit blood pressure, ECG data, temperature, blood glucose, and other critical health metrics from compatible devices. There is often a difference between consumer and clinical-grade health devices, and Mobius creates a connection with both.
We’re exploring the opportunities for integration with Apple Health and other medical information technology, and we’re excited to see what new innovations will come to the field in the next few years.
Featured Post
Posted by Mike Swartz
Featured Post
November 16th, 2014
Posted by Adam Strom
It’s been busy here at Mobius HQ, and with the holidays fast-approaching, we’ll soon be even busier! We’ve got several exciting meetings this week, including one with our Board of Directors. Also on the line-up is a meeting with the … Read More
Featured Post
Do you use medical or health monitors at home, or apps on a smartphone? Do you know if they are regulated by the government?
mHealth is making easier to be proactive about your own health, and to take a significant role in monitoring it. Along with the benefits of this hands-on approach, however, this trend carries risks from the limited knowledge that patients have about such devices relative to medical professionals.
In the United States, medical devices are regulated by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). The FDA’s definition of a medical device is wordy and convoluted: “an instrument, apparatus, implement, machine, contrivance, implant, in vitro reagent, or other” thing that meets any of three criteria:
-
Intended to diagnose, cure, treat, prevent, etc. diseases or other conditions
-
“Intended to affect the structure or any function of the body” but not through metabolism or chemical action (which would classify it as a drug, regulated separately)
-
The FDA says so
This covers all the obvious, serious medical equipment like X-ray machines, surgical apparatus, contact lenses, and hypodermic needles. On the less significant items, the distinction can seem more arbitrary. If a doctor examines you for strep throat, the tongue depressor she uses, a small variation on what is likely the oldest tool used by humans, is a regulated medical device. A pedometer on your smartphone? Not regulated.
Mobile medical apps themselves can be regulated; the FDA released guidelines in 2011 for such apps. An app qualifies as a medical device if it serves as an accessory to a device that is already regulated or if it transforms the mobile device into a medical device by causing it to meet the original criteria.
Of particular interest for mobile devices are physiological monitors and the sensors that they use, like pedometers, glucometers, and heart rate monitors. The question of regulation such was addressed in a meeting between Apple and the FDA, notes on which were recently released through a Freedom of Information Act request.
In the FDA’s notes, they stress that the intended purpose of the device is critical. If it relates to a particular disease or condition, nearly anything can be a medical device; if not, regulation is unlikely. If a blood glucometer, which measures blood sugar, is intended to be used by diabetics to monitor their condition, it is regulated. However, the FDA pointed to glucometers as an example of sensors that could be unregulated if designed and marketed for a non-medical purpose like nutrition.
This guidance opens the door for a host of non-regulated quasi-medical sensors. Much of mHealth technology is explicitly designed for general health and wellness, though some companies are tackling legitimate medical treatment.
Essentially this means that users should assume a personal health sensor or app is unregulated unless the manufacturer states otherwise. Caution when using unregulated health products is wise; regulation ensures accuracy and privacy, and unregulated products may offer neither.
Featured Post
November 9th, 2014
Posted by Adam Strom
We had some great business development this week! A very productive meeting with the CEO of a local hospital revealed very promising opportunities for both Mobius Clinic and Mobius Mobile. These opportunities represent validation of our products in the hospital … Read More
Featured Post
Healthcare Helpouts from Google Bring Medical Video Chat into the Mainstream
Posted by Mike Swartz
Google recently launched a trial telemedicine project: Healthcare Helpouts. Built on their general Helpouts platform, the service will offer video conferencing with doctors, free of charge during the trial period. Helpouts was released in November of 2013 with the aim … Read More
Featured Post
November 2nd, 2014
Posted by Adam Strom
We’re happy to announce that the brand-new Mobius Clinic website will be launched, on-schedule, tomorrow! This website represents a lot of effort – both in graphic design and product messaging. We hope you enjoy the website and find that it … Read More
Featured Post
Emergency care is a big problem in the American healthcare system, and one that mHealth and telehealth have the potential to ameliorate.
While a hospital emergency room certainly is the ideal destination for many patients in legitimate emergencies, it is also used by many who do not fit that description. Emergency departments are overcrowded, using precious resources and driving up long wait times for all but the most critical patients; partially as a result, the financial cost of a visit is exorbitant.
The astronomical (and rising) costs of emergency rooms in the US have been well documented in recent years, if not productively addressed (for an in-depth look at emergency room billing and hospital costs generally, check out this New York Times article). The article discusses a bill for $3355.96 for a few stitches, which is not as unusual as one might expect. ER prices, and hospital prices generally, are set much higher than most payers actually pay; Medicare, Medicaid, and insurance companies have negotiated lower rates, a small percentage of patients are treated though they will be unable to pay anything, and hospitals will often reduce the bill for private payers if asked. However, the sticker price is demanded of some patients.
The CEO of California Pacific Medical Center, the greatest revenue-generating non-profit hospital in the state, defends the prices as necessary to support the high costs of running a fully-prepared ER. He gave the NYT the example that the hospital’s ER needs to have a neurosurgeon on call at all times for potential stroke patients.
This could offer a more reasonable, albeit hardly more satisfying, explanation of thousand-dollar stitches: patients aren’t paying for the service they need, they’re paying for the service the hospital is ready to provide, with high fixed costs that must be covered regardless of what they do for the patient. As a Bloomberg article explains it, non-critical emergency room patients are displacing those who really need to be there, and the hospital is recouping its opportunity cost for not treating those potential expensive patients. “It’s not as though the actual value of a single stitch is $500. Rather, that price reflects the opportunity cost to the hospital of treating you rather than someone with graver (and more expensive) medical needs… [which] could very well be thousands of dollars, even for just an hour of medical attention.”
Bloomberg cites research findings that somewhere between 13.7% and 27.1% of visits to the ER are unnecessary (could have been treated elsewhere). Walk-in clinics and urgent-care centers exist for just this purpose. But frequently, the patient (or parent) lacks the resources to know if they (or their child) need the emergency room, another type of urgent care, a visit to a regular doctor sometime in the coming days, or just a bowl of ice cream.
This massive hole in the system can be filled quite effectively with telehealth. Many insurance companies actually offer a nurse hotline for their customers (or anyone who has the number) for just this kind of thing, but it can be difficult for the nurse to diagnose an unknown patient over the phone with no visuals, and even more difficult for a concerned patient to trust the unknown voice on the other end of the line when health is at stake.
Instead, modern mHealth could allow patients to contact someone in their own doctor’s office through a video-call, explain the scenario, and get an opinion on the best treatment option and where to get it. This way, the resources of the emergency room can be saved for those who really need them, while patients with lesser concerns can receive effective, safe and timely care at a reasonable price.
Featured Post
October 26th, 2014
Posted by Adam Strom
Mobius Clinic is quickly becoming a full-featured platform. Typically at launch, companies offer a “minimally viable product,” meaning, the product functions at only the most basic level. Instead, while we await approvals from EMR vendors, we’ve been surpassing the “minimal” … Read More
Featured Post