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Morning Briefing

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Monday, Aug 1 2016

Full Issue

Beyond Wearables: How All Your Daily Activity May Become Usable Health Data

In addition to health-specific apps, there is a range of ways for companies to gather information related to health care from a person's daily life. And the methods are rarely governed by HIPAA. Meanwhile the FDA just confirmed the agency won't be regulating fitness trackers and certain mobile health apps.

There are apps that can help people with diabetes keep track of their blood sugar and apps that can attach to a blood pressure cuff and store blood pressure information. I use an app called ZocDoc to schedule and manage doctor's appointments. Every time I see a therapist or a primary care doctor or dentist, the data get stored in my personal account. But we leave behind other trails of health data, too, from apps and activities that are sometimes only tangentially health related. When I walk down the street, an app on my phone logs steps as it bounces against my thigh. When I swipe a loyalty card at the pharmacy, the over-the-counter medications that I buy become bits of data attached to my name. (Chen, 7/30)

The FDA won't regulate fitness trackers and certain mobile health apps, the agency confirmed in a final guidance document released July 28. The Food and Drug Administration won't enforce its rules over products that are intended only for general wellness, such as tools for weight management, physical fitness or mental acuity, the agency said. Wellness products can be standalone products or mobile applications, and can also be sold as games, the agency said. (Ruoff, 7/29)

Privacy is a major issue these days, nowhere more so than in health care. Medical records contain exceedingly personal patient details, and can fetch top dollar on the black market. So it was no surprise to see the recent $2.7 million settlement the University of Mississippi Medical Center reached to resolve alleged HIPAA violations. The settlement was triggered by the theft of a password-protected laptop in 2013, and when the Health and Human Services Office for Civil Rights began investigating, it discovered that the medical center allowed employees to access the main network via a generic username and password. (Swann, 7/29)

In other health technology news聽鈥

Any Pok茅mon-loving child stuck in a hospital bed would probably be ecstatic to see an Eevee or a Squirtle, two especially cute characters on the popular animated game 鈥淧ok茅mon Go,鈥 wandering around the hallways or even their own rooms. Trouble is, the elusive creatures aren鈥檛 always hanging around pediatric wards, and some kids are too sick to get out and 鈥渃atch 鈥檈m all.鈥 That鈥檚 why well-intentioned strangers have been placing 鈥渓ures,鈥 or virtual Pok茅mon-attracting devices, in Sacramento hospitals, causing staff to worry over privacy and security threats 鈥 and in some cases to even ban the game. (Caiola, 7/30)

Marty remembers looking outside the window of his room, seeing cars go by and thinking to himself, 鈥淗ow do you get in your car and just go, you know, just go about your day?鈥 Leanna talks of 鈥済oing through my day like a cement block.鈥 Sierra Rose recalls how she would stop caring about her job, thinking, 鈥淥h, what is the point of it? I鈥檓 just a low-class American anyway.鈥 They are among 38 people from throughout the country, all of them 18 to 29 years old, who were interviewed about different aspects of depression for a new website designed to let people better understand the diseases and conditions they鈥檙e facing. (Boulton, 7/30)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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