Growth Of SMART Health Care Apps May Be Slow, But Inevitable
Harvard Medical School conference lays out uses for a health data platform
This week has been teaming with health care conferences, particularly in Boston, and was declared by President Obama to be National Health IT Week as well. I chose to spend my time at the second ITdotHealth conference, where I enjoyed many intense conversations with some of the leaders in the health care field, along with news about the SMART Platform at the center of the conference, the excitement of a Clayton Christiansen talk, and the general panache of hanging out at the Harvard Medical School.
SMART, funded by the Office of the National Coordinator in Health and Human Services, is an attempt to slice through the Babel of EHR formats that prevent useful applications from being developed for patient data. Imagine if something like the wealth of mash-ups built on Google Maps (crime sites, disaster markers, restaurant locations) existed for your own health data. This is what SMART hopes to do. They can already showcase some working apps, such as overviews of patient data for doctors, and a real-life implementation of the heart disease user interface proposed by David McCandless in WIRED magazine.
- Tags:
- American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA)
- Aneesh Chopra
- Clayton Christiansen
- David McCandless
- electronic health records (EHRs)
- Eric Horvitz
- Google Maps
- Health Apps
- health data
- health information technology (HIT)
- Health Information Technology for Economic & Clinical Health (HITECH) Act
- healthcare reform
- Innovation
- ITDotHealth Conference
- Jim Hansen
- Josh Mandel
- Ken Mandl
- medical apps
- medical errors
- National Health IT Week
- Nich Wattanasin
- Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC)
- open standards
- patient access
- patient data
- patient records
- safety
- SMART
- Todd Park
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