“HealthVault SMART Patient” App Built in Under a Week

After attending last week’s Harvard Health IT Meeting (“ITdotHealth II”), HealthVault’s Sean Nolan got right to work on an app that enables providers to send their patients a copy of their clinical information as a Continuity of Care Document.

Medicine 2.0 Impressions from Pew Internet Panelist

Susannah Fox, an Associate Director of the Pew Internet & American Life Project, was at Medicine 2.0 over the weekend. In addition to speaking on a panel, she shared her impressions of Day One on the e-patients.net blog, including a reference to the SMART Platforms presentation and enthusiasm about our clinician-facing apps.

Summary of “ITdotHealth II” – the 2012 Harvard Health IT Meeting

The following is an overview of the conference, held September 10-11, 2012. In several weeks, we will post a complete executive summary, as well as videos and slide presentations from the event.

The concept of substitutable apps has become a reality, as multiple examples illustrate—such as the blood pressure app, now in live clinical use on the Cerner System at Boston Children’s Hospital: Continue reading “Summary of “ITdotHealth II” – the 2012 Harvard Health IT Meeting”

Harvard Health IT Meeting: O’Reilly Radar Coverage

In his piece Growth of SMART health care apps may be slow, but inevitable,” Andy Oram sums up this week’s Harvard Health IT Meeting, aka ITdotHealth II.

Stay tuned to the SMART Platforms site over the next several weeks for complete, in-depth coverage of the conference.

Halamka Recaps Participation in ITdotHealth II

On his Life as a Healthcare CIO blog, John Halamka gives a synopsis of his contribution to ITdotHealth II. He was among the panelists speaking Monday on “Apps and APIs: Innovating Around Vendor and Homegrown EHRs.” His summary addresses the issue from federal, state, and local perspectives.

How to Build a Successful API

In Suddenly it’s all about the APIs, Microsoft HealthVault’s Sean Nolan outlines six key challenges to building an API that is desirable to developers—whose adoption of it, or lack thereof, will make or break its survival in the marketplace.

Lilly’s “Open Clinical Intelligence Network” Aligned With Substitutability

Tom Krohn, an attendee to the recent Health IT Meeting at Harvard (“ITdotHealth II”), is the business lead for the Eli Lilly Clinical Open Innovation team. Leading up to the meeting, he wrote about the ways his team’s approach aligns with SMART.

New SMART Partner: Fjord

Introducing another partner in our mission to bridge the doctor-developer-designer divide: Fjord. This digital service design consultancy’s New York office will be helping the SMART team create an open-source, web-based, interactive pediatric growth chart application. Embracing a design-led approach to clinical end-user needs, this collaboration aims to develop a new way to present pediatric growth charts so they can be easily read, understood, and shared among clinicians and other medical professionals, as well as used in communication with parents.

The collaboration will start with an immersive phase of interviewing pediatric and medical informatics specialists to help establish current content, context, and usage of the pediatric growth chart. This targeted usability research will surface insights and understanding of how pediatric growth charts are actually used and how they should be changed to enhance their utility for different clinical and communication purposes. The Fjord team will then create detailed designs that will be tested and refined with clinicians and parents.

After the design has been completed, the Fjord and SMART Project teams will collaborate to complete a full development, implementation, and launch of the design, resulting in an end-to-end web app experience to be introduced to, and shared with, the medical and clinical informatics community.

Fjord Logo

New SMART Partner: Sermo Online Physician Community

The SMART team is pleased to announce a new partnership that will break down barriers between developers, designers, and doctors. Sermo, the largest online physician community in the United States, will connect us with their network of over 130,000 members for feedback on SMART apps as they are created.

“We are excited to be working with the SMART project,” said Jon Michaeli, VP, Marketing and Membership. “It’s no secret there are major obstacles associated with the implementation and widespread adoption of an efficient IT infrastructure in the US healthcare system today. Physicians in the Sermo community are constantly exchanging war stories, from how EMR incompatibilities cripple their work streams to how they compromise rather than improve patient care. This project presents a great opportunity for them to share their opinions with leading researchers and technologists who are well positioned to make a difference.”

An example of the kind of insights that Sermo has gathered from its members is the Physician Sentiment Index™ (PSI), conducted annually since 2010 along with athenahealth, a cloud-based physician software and billing firm. The 2012 PSI was just released in June.

Sermo mobile and desktop interfaces

SMART-Indivo App Challenge

The SMART-Indivo App Challenge is now Live!

This contest is a call to developers to build an Indivo app that provides value to patients using data delivered through the SMART API and Indivo-specific extensions. The top 3 submissions will win cash prizes, with the top one taking home $10,000 and the opportunity to exhibit at an upcoming conference.

We look forward to seeing what innovative ideas are enabled by Indivo and its integration with SMART, so check out the contest details, read the Indivo Documentation, visit the Indivo Sandbox, and start hacking!

Health2.0 Developer Challenge logo