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So back in 2011 I wrote the first profile in IHE that was targeting ‘ease of use by lightweight application platforms such as MobileHealth Applications”. The MobileHealth Documents (MHD) profile was born to provide a more simple API to an XDS environment. The MobileHealth Documents (MHD) is the result.
The program also supports independent mobile app developers who target providers and patients. App Orchard, for its part, lets developers use a FHIR-based API to access an Epic development sandbox. Previously, Epic wouldn’t let mobile app developers connect to its EMR until a customer requested permission on their behalf.
There is some strong discussion going on at HL7 around privacy concerns, especially now that HL7 FHIR has enabled easy application writing. The discussion started with an article " Warning mHealth security fears are opening doors to app and device innovation " summarizing a study done by Ketchum.
who is a Primary Care Physician, Professor at UCSF & coFounder at Open mHealth (follow her on Twitter @IdaSim ). mHealth Insights. health care spending, 3 so the promise of mobilehealth is especially attractive.” Authored by Ida Sim, M.D., More than 40% of U.S.
APIs, Internet of (Healthy) Things, and AR/VR among the others are getting deployed in retail channels and at home to support peoples’ health in the real world, in real time outside of the clinical setting. For health care, the application of FHIR standards helps mobilize data for better health, turbocharging this trend.
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