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Groups sink $5.3M into PHR apps

Tools
Tags
Diabetes
Personal Health Records (PHRs)
California Healthcare Foundation
develop tools
chronically ill

Over the next 18 months, researchers will conduct a new, ambitious effort aimed at helping consumers use IT to manage their health. Participants in the Project HealthDesign initiative, which was funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and California HealthCare Foundation, will develop tools intended to improve the PHR model. Unlike other PHR development efforts, which often create technical silos of their own, the grant teams are designing applications that can be built upon a common platform. The teams will spend six months developing PHR applications, then test the prototypes with targeted populations.

The planned projects span an intriguing range of important clinical problems. They include a tool providing customized care plans for breast cancer patients, self-management apps for heart failure/heart disease patients and diabetics, tools improving chronic disease med management between physician office visits, a PHR helping chronically-ill children manage their medication and PDA applications helping pain patients manage their meds.

Get more background on the PHR development initiative:
- read this RWJF press release
- get more background on Project HealthDesign

Related Articles:
GA insurers unveil easy-access PHRs. Report
Vendor trials cellphone-based diabetes monitoring. Report
Remote monitoring can be hampered by IT, workflow issues. Editorial

Comments

The Project HealthDesign program described itself as being "new" and "aimed at helping consumers". But as one looks at the grantees projects, it becomes painfully clear that the old-school and politically correct mentality remains. All of the awards went to projects that will only study narrowly focused groups based on race or gender or age, then further divided into cronic disease categories. Eventhough the announcement claims that "Unlike other PHR development efforts, which often create technical silos of their own", that is exactly what Project HealthDesign will accomplish - group-based and disease-based silos. They will have no common ground to "build on a common platform". The result will not be any new PHR technology that will be used in the mainstream of healthcare consumers. The awards completely missed the claim of being an "ambitious effort".

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