IBM Teams with Google and Continua Health Alliance to Move Data Into Google Health and Other PHRs

IBM (NYSE: IBM)IBM (NYSE: IBM), in collaboration with Google and the Continua Health Alliance, announced new software that will enable personal medical devices used for patient monitoring, screening and routine evaluation to automatically stream data results into a patient's Google Health Account or other personal health record (PHR). This breakthrough extends the value of PHRs to consumers and also helps to ensure that such records are current and accurate at all times. Once stored in a PHR, the data can also be shared with physicians and other members of the extended care network at a user's discretion.

Using IBM software to connect personal medical devices to Google Health and other health-record systems will allow patients to exchange vital health information with their doctors and other health services professionals more easily, and in real-time. As a result, health professionals can provide more timely feedback to patients on their conditions, suggest treatments, and help improve overall quality of life. In a world where chronic diseases like diabetes afflict more than 600 million(1), where more than one billion are overweight(2), and where the number of people older than 60 years will reach 1.2 billion by 2025(3), the IBM software solution can also help advance personalized healthcare.

For example, a busy mom can receive daily electronic updates on the health status of an aging parent who lives alone, is suffering from high blood pressure, and is on multiple medications. A traveling businessperson, who is diabetic and training for a marathon, can have a real-time discussion about her blood sugar levels and heart rate with her coach hundreds of miles away.

Google Health allows users to store, manage, and share their medical records and personal health information securely online. Google Health was officially launched last May, and is free to users and available online at www.google.com/health.

"Our partnership with IBM will help both providers and users gain access to their device data in a highly simplified and automated fashion," said Sameer Samat, Director for Google Health. "IBM has taken an important step in providing software that enables device manufacturers and hospitals to easily upload recorded data into a PHR platform, such as Google Health."

IBM integrated the capabilities of Information Management, Business Intelligence and the WebSphere Premises Server sensor event platform with Google Health. The new IBM solution will be able to:

  • Support a wide variety of use cases, including chronic disease management, health and wellness, and elderly care, both in the United States as well as in countries and health-services enterprises around the world.
  • Leverage the power of Services-Oriented Architectures, so that the partners can quickly build increasing volumes of flexible solutions for healthcare consumers and services providers based on modular components.
  • Support the rapid growth of open standards through the power of the Continua Alliance, which is dedicated to enabling interoperable healthcare products and solutions.
  • Support the development of solutions using the Google Health open platform.

"By harnessing the rapidly growing use of remote patient monitoring across every part of the healthcare services industry, our new IBM solution greatly increases the real-time value of PHRs for consumers everywhere," said Dan Pelino, General Manager, IBM Healthcare & Life Sciences Industry. "Open standards-based systems and technologies - freely available to anyone interested in using them - are key to fueling the development of systems that can share and exchange vital healthcare information on a timely basis, whenever and wherever it's needed."

IBM developed the software based on guidelines from Continua Health Alliance, a globally recognized organization dedicated to enabling interoperable personal healthcare products and solutions. It is also based in part on key open-source software available now from Eclipse and Open Health Tools, which are open-source communities dedicated to supporting advancements in healthcare.

"With close to a quarter of the world's population overweight, more than 600 million people with some form of chronic disease, and millions more reaching retirement age, the time for greater personal health management is now," said Dave Whitlinger, Continua Health Alliance President. "Continua member companies like IBM and Google are working on real solutions that will empower consumers and healthcare professionals to access and share information quickly and easily through connected products and solutions. Together, we can create a new marketplace, improve health and quality of life, and advance personal telehealth worldwide."

The technology behind this open, interoperable advance in PHR function was demonstrated successfully in October at the Partners Connected Health Symposium in Boston, MA, by IBM and Google, with the support of Continua Health Alliance.

Related news articles:

Source: eHealthServer.com

(1) World Health Organization. (2005) Ten Facts About Chronic Disease
(2) World Health Organization. (2003). Obesity and Overweight: Dr. P. Puska, Dr. C. Nishida, Mr. D. Porter
(3) World Health Organization. (2006, February 13). The world is fast ageing - have we noticed?

About IBM
For more information about IBM, please visit www.ibm.com.

Most Popular Now

Is Your Marketing Effective for an NHS C…

How can you make sure you get the right message across to an NHS chief information officer, or chief nursing information officer? Replay this webinar with Professor Natasha Phillips, former...

Welcome Evo, Generative AI for the Genom…

Brian Hie runs the Laboratory of Evolutionary Design at Stanford, where he works at the crossroads of artificial intelligence and biology. Not long ago, Hie pondered a provocative question: If...

We could Soon Use AI to Detect Brain Tum…

A new paper in Biology Methods and Protocols, published by Oxford University Press, shows that scientists can train artificial intelligence (AI) models to distinguish brain tumors from healthy tissue. AI...

Telehealth Significantly Boosts Treatmen…

New research reveals a dramatic improvement in diagnosing and curing people living with hepatitis C in rural communities using both telemedicine and support from peers with lived experience in drug...

Research Study Shows the Cost-Effectiven…

Earlier research showed that primary care clinicians using AI-ECG tools identified more unknown cases of a weak heart pump, also called low ejection fraction, than without AI. New study findings...

AI can Predict Study Results Better than…

Large language models, a type of AI that analyses text, can predict the results of proposed neuroscience studies more accurately than human experts, finds a new study led by UCL...

New Guidance for Ensuring AI Safety in C…

As artificial intelligence (AI) becomes more prevalent in health care, organizations and clinicians must take steps to ensure its safe implementation and use in real-world clinical settings, according to an...

Remote Telemedicine Tool Found Highly Ac…

Collecting images of suspicious-looking skin growths and sending them off-site for specialists to analyze is as accurate in identifying skin cancers as having a dermatologist examine them in person, a...

Philips Aims to Advance Cardiac MRI Tech…

Royal Philips (NYSE: PHG, AEX: PHIA) and Mayo Clinic announced a research collaboration aimed at advancing MRI for cardiac applications. Through this investigation, Philips and Mayo Clinic will look to...

New Study Reveals Why Organisations are …

The slow adoption of blockchain technology is partly driven by overhyped promises that often obscure the complex technological, organisational, and environmental challenges, according to research from the University of Surrey...

Deep Learning Model Accurately Diagnoses…

Using just one inhalation lung CT scan, a deep learning model can accurately diagnose and stage chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), according to a study published today in Radiology: Cardiothoracic...

Shape-Changing Device Helps Visually Imp…

Researchers from Imperial College London, working with the company MakeSense Technology and the charity Bravo Victor, have developed a shape-changing device called Shape that helps people with visual impairment navigate...