Christian Farr, reporting for Reuters, explains that Apple wants to ensure that the aforementioned institutions are able to access health data, such as blood pressure, pulse and weight, available for consumers and health providers to view in one place.
Cleveland Clinic associate chief information officer William Morris said the clinical solutions team is experimenting with HealthKit’s beta and is providing feedback to Apple.
HealthKit and related services could become a means for some technology teams at budget-strapped hospitals to save time and resources, as mobile developers won’t have to integrate with dozens of apps and devices like fitness trackers or Glucometers as they have to now, he said.
Privacy and regulatory requirements, however, may hinder the adoption of Apple’s system among US healthcare pros. As you’re probably aware, Apple conceived the stock iOS 8 Health app as a central repository for users’ health data, stored in a secure location on your device.
iOS 8 is said to be released to public this fall, ll, third-party fitness and health apps and accessories (like the rumored iWatch) will be able to ask for your permission in order to send the data they produce to the Health database. In turn, health/fitness dat such as steps taken and Nike Fuel points earned will no longer be isolated within individual apps.
Here’s more from Apple:
With HealthKit, developers can make their apps even more useful by allowing them to access your health data, too. And you choose what you want shared. For example, you can allow the data from your blood pressure app to be automatically shared with your doctor.
Or allow your nutrition app to tell your fitness apps how many calories you consume each day. When your health and fitness apps work together, they become more powerful. And you might, too.
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