SMART Health Apps: Children’s Hospital, Harvard Medical Announce Contest Winners

BostInno, June 23, 2011 — Cheryl Morris
New opportunities for innovations in the health industry are everywhere, thanks in part to more sophisticated smartphones like the iPhone and Android devices. In early March we highlighted a mobile health app contest being put on by Children’s Hospital Boston and Harvard Medical School. Winners were announced earlier this week, working to help welcome a new wave of apps to hospitals, patients and physicians…
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SMART App Challenge Winner Announced

On June 16th and 17th, 2011, our judges convened and deliberated to score the apps for the SMART Apps for Health $5,000 Challenge, which opened back in March.

Meducation is the winner.
Meducation sample pages

The Meducation SMART app, created by Polyglot Systems, Inc. – a health IT company with a focus on improving care and access for underserved patient populations – provides multilingual, patient-friendly instructions for medications listed in a physician’s electronic medical record or the personally controlled health record of a patient. The app uses the SMART programming interface to obtain the medication list and then links out to a drug information database, which facilitates the generation of simplified medication instructions for patients, available in a dozen languages.

In addition to the winner, several selected as honorable mentions:

  • Clinical Research facilitates interoperability between an EMR system and a clinical electronic data capture system
  • MyNote provides an intuitive, interactive timeline of patient history with disease-specific schemes, and allows patients to annotate the timeline
  • Priority Contact enhances the work process of a clinician by managing contact with patients after they have left the clinic and new information relevant to their treatment plan has been obtained
  • DxSocial matches patients with doctors based on their experience treating patients similar to them matches patients with doctors based on their experience treating patients similar to them
  • Medications Risk Maps for SMArt helps identify and compare medication side effects and risk of adverse events across drugs
  • rxInfo is a suite of SMART apps to help identify patients for clinical trials, provide drug interaction information, FDA Label information about marketed drugs, and a listing of nearby federally funded health centers

You can view all the submitted apps at http://smartapps.challenge.gov/submissions.

Current-stage EMRs decide if, when, and how you will view the data trapped in their systems. The SMART Platform Apps Challenge was designed to demonstrate what can happen when electronic health information becomes liberated and can be readily consumed by computer applications. iPhone and Android app developers have been very successful because the address book and GPS data in those platforms is clearly and consistently presented by the platform. Our goal is to present health data in as useful and consistent format. Based on the submissions we received, we think we have demonstrated that this approach can be successful.

That we had so many excellent applicants reflects the hunger and need felt in the community to deliver innovative healthcare applications directly to doctors and patients without having to learn the details of a large, monolithic EMR

Congratulations to our winner and honorable mentions!

SMART app receives clinician praise

The SMART team is working on creating a blood pressure centiles SMART app for initial deployment at Children’s Hospital, Boston.  There aren’t standard cutoffs for normal pediatric blood pressures.  For kids, the normal blood pressure depends upon height and gender.  Unfortunately, looking up these normal blood pressures is pretty time consuming.  Thus, we’re working with a great, transdisciplinary group of docs at Children’s to create an app that will do the calculating for them and give them more time with their patients.  One of those docs is cardiologist Justin Zachariah, M.D., M.P.H.  He said, “What you have already created is definitely a quantum leap forward compared to where we are now.”  Through SMART, we’ll be able to make this app available to other SMART-enabled systems.

15 SMART Apps for Health Submitted

We’re happy to announce that the SMART Apps for Health Challenge resulted in 15 apps being submitted.  These apps range from PriorityContact(TM), an app that manages contact with patients, to rxClinicalTrials, which helps to identify trials that a patient might be eligible for through ClinicalTrials.gov.  Our entrants each got their app working in the SMART Reference EMR in under 3 months, demonstrating the power of lowering the barriers to developer engagement in health IT.  The judging period is now underway, and we’ll announce the winner of the $5,000 on June 22nd. Stay tuned!

June 3 webinar call in details

Time: 12:00 pm, Eastern Daylight Time (New York, GMT-04:00)
Meeting Number: 714 847 971
Meeting Password: (This meeting does not require a password.)

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To join the online meeting (Now from mobile devices!)
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1. Go to http://hms.webex.com/hms/j.php?ED=156136087&UID=1219162272&RT=MiMxMQ%3D%3D
2. If requested, enter your name and email address.
3. If a password is required, enter the meeting password: (This meeting does not require a password.)
4. Click “Join”.

To view in other time zones or languages, please click the link:
http://hms.webex.com/hms/j.php?ED=156136087&UID=1219162272&ORT=MiMxMQ%3D%3D

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To join the audio conference only
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To receive a call back, provide your phone number when you join the meeting, or call the number below and enter the access code.
Call-in toll-free number (US/Canada): 1-866-699-3239
Call-in toll number (US/Canada): 1-408-792-6300
Global call-in numbers: http://hms.webex.com/hms/globalcallin.php?serviceType=MC&ED=156136087&tollFree=1
Toll-free dialing restrictions: http://www.webex.com/pdf/tollfree_restrictions.pdf

Access code:714 847 971

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For assistance
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1. Go to http://hms.webex.com/hms/mc
2. On the left navigation bar, click “Support”.

Indivo Users Webinar, June 3rd, 2011

The development team for Indivo X, the SMART-enabled, open source personally controlled health record platform, is going to conduct a webinar on June 3rd. 2011. Topics will include: the current state of the platform and API; ongoing projects in the Indivo X ecosystem, including the use of Indivo X in a patient portal and in an online social network; a proposed roadmap for upcoming features and enhancements, such as plans to support the Direct Project.

Please register here if you plan to join us on June 3rd. We’ll send you an invitation with instructions to join the webinar shortly before the event. An in person meeting will be planned for sometime thereafter. Please go to www.indivohealth.org to learn more about Indivo X.

Indivo Users Webinar Agenda

Friday, June 3, 2011

12Noon Welcome and Intro

12:15pm Indivo X

12:25pm Indivo X Ecosystem

1:05pm Indivo X Roadmap

  • Pluggable Schemas
  • Enhanced Database Support
  • Event Encapsulation
  • www.SMARTPlatforms.org API Support
  • Direct Implementation

1:40pm Q&A

2:00pm Adjourn

Indivo X at OSCON 2011

Indivo X is the SMART-enabled, open source personally controlled health record platform. Daniel Haas, the platform’s lead architect, will be delivering a talk on the architecture of and security implications of Indivo X, its place in the open source community, its prospects for future development, and its relationship to SMART Platforms. Details about his talk can be found here: http://www.oscon.com/oscon2011/public/schedule/detail/19713.

You can learn more about Indivo X at http://indivohealth.org

SMART Health App $5000 Challenge

The SMART $5K Apps Challenge is now closed to entries, but you can still learn about it at our Challenge.gov page!

Our panel of judges are currently reviewing the entries, and winners will be announced on June 22nd.

SMART wishes to thank our eminent panel of judges:

Susannah Fox
Director of Health Research at the Pew Internet & American Life Project

Regina Herzlinger
Nancy R. McPherson Professor of Business Administration, Harvard Business School

David Kibbe
Director, Center for Health Information Technology, American Academy of Family Physicians
The Kibbe Group LLC

Ben Shneiderman
Professor of Computer Science at the Human-Computer Interaction Laboratory at the University of Maryland, College Park

Doug Solomon
Chief Technology Officer at IDEO

Edward Tufte
Professor Emeritus of Political Science, Statistics, and Computer Science at Yale University

Jim Walker
Chief Health Information Officer, Geisinger Health Systems


April 27th Webinar: How to Become a SMART Container

SMART Webinar April 27

Learn how your health IT system can harness the power of the developer community.

The SMART (Substitutable Medical Apps, Reusable Technologies) project is working to lower the barriers for external developers to create innovative healthcare apps. A SMART-enabled health IT system will be positioned to take advantage of these innovations and make them available to its users.

Attend our webinar and learn how your health IT system can become SMART.
April 27, 2011 2:00 – 3:00 P.M. Eastern

http://hms.webex.com/hms/j.php?ED=140265297&UID=0&PW=NY2QzZGM4OTBk&RT=Mi
MxMQ%3D%3D Meeting Number: 716 280 736 Meeting Password: SHARP

To join the audio conference only:
Call-in toll-free number (US/Canada): 1-866-699-3239
Call-in toll number (US/Canada): 1-408-792-6300
Access code: 716 280 736