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I can’t find an iPhone checklist app worth a damn. Help me @Atul_Gawande, you’re my only hope.—...
I can’t find an iPhone checklist app worth a damn. Help me @Atul_Gawande, you’re my only hope. — Joshua Schwimmer (@joshuaschwimmer) December 31, 2013 Posted on infosnack.
Source: Kidney Notes - December 30, 2013 Category: Urologists and Nephrologists Authors: Joshua Schwimmer Source Type: blogs

Apple Patent Could Add Heart Sensor To iPhones
On Christmas Eve the US Patent Office dropped a present down Apple’s chimney: a patent for a “seamlessly embedded heart rate monitor” that might one day allow an iPhone to identify and authenticate a user through the unique signature of the heart’s electrocardiogram (ECG).   … Click here to read the full story on Forbes.  
Source: CardioBrief - January 6, 2014 Category: Cardiology Authors: Larry Husten Tags: People, Places & Events Policy & Ethics Apple heart monitor iPhone Source Type: blogs

No, An Apple Device Won’t Tell You If You’re Having A Heart Attack
No one knows for sure but Apple appears to be strongly interested in adding medical applications and technologies to its current and future products. We know that Apple has patented a heart sensor that could be incorporated in a future iPhone or iWatch, though it seems more likely that it would be used for security rather than health purposes. We also know that top Apple executives have met with FDA commissioner Margaret Hamburg and top FDA device regulators, though the details of their discussion have not been disclosed. But one new report on SF Gate is almost certainly wrong: an Apple device won’t be able More…
Source: CardioBrief - February 17, 2014 Category: Cardiology Authors: Larry Husten Tags: People, Places & Events Policy & Ethics Prevention, Epidemiology & Outcomes AliveCor Apple iPhone mobile technology Source Type: blogs

iPhone home screen, latest iteration. Balanced (@areyoubalanced) replaces Habit List, @Pocket...
iPhone home screen, latest iteration. Balanced (@areyoubalanced) replaces Habit List, @Pocket replaces Kindle. pic.twitter.com/LEQU7TOFRp — Joshua Schwimmer (@joshuaschwimmer) February 16, 2014 Posted on infosnack.
Source: Kidney Notes - February 16, 2014 Category: Urologists and Nephrologists Authors: Joshua Schwimmer Source Type: blogs

The Relation Between The Human Touch and Medical Technology: AND Instead of OR
I’ve been giving talks about the future of medicine for years and many times, part of the audience is worried about losing the human touch of practicing medicine by using more technologies. As a medical futurist, I want to make things clear here. The relation between the human touch in medicine and disruptive innovations is and; instead of or as people tend to think. By losing the quintessence of practicing medicine, the real-life doctor-patient relationship, we would lose everything. Although without using innovative technologies, it is becoming more and more complicated (if not impossible) to provide proper care. ...
Source: ScienceRoll - January 28, 2014 Category: Geneticists and Genetics Commentators Authors: Bertalan Meskó (MD, PhD) Tags: eHealth Future Health 2.0 Medicine Medicine 2.0 Web 2.0 disruptive Healthcare Innovation technology Source Type: blogs

Wello for Vital Signs Monitoring on Your iPhone
A number of devices now exist that turn smartphones into medical monitors, but they tend to focus on specific vital signs and you’d have to carry a number of separate components to measure a variety of parameters. A new iPhone case called Wello...
Source: Medgadget - March 6, 2014 Category: Technology Consultants Authors: Editors Tags: Medicine Net News Source Type: blogs

iPhone home screen, latest iteration: added Checkmark 2 (@getcheckmark). pic.twitter.com/QFGcYc8OnW—...
iPhone home screen, latest iteration: added Checkmark 2 (@getcheckmark). pic.twitter.com/QFGcYc8OnW — Joshua Schwimmer, MD (@joshuaschwimmer) March 20, 2014 Posted on infosnack.
Source: Kidney Notes - March 20, 2014 Category: Urologists and Nephrologists Authors: Joshua Schwimmer Source Type: blogs

"Here is a running list of our personal favorite apps on iPhone, iPad, and Mac." (Great list. I use...
"Here is a running list of our personal favorite apps on iPhone, iPad, and Mac." (Great list. I use many daily.) http://t.co/4WIoGlAk0L — Joshua Schwimmer, MD (@joshuaschwimmer) March 23, 2014 Posted on infosnack.
Source: Kidney Notes - March 23, 2014 Category: Urologists and Nephrologists Authors: Joshua Schwimmer Source Type: blogs

TechTool Thursday 054 Resus Code Apps
TechTool review Code Apps for iOS – multiple developers For most of us, full-blown resuscitations are the most exciting and terrifying parts of our job. Someone is always allocated to be the scribe – but are there any apps that can make this job easier? I’ve been having a look at apps for keeping track of resus situations – specifically which drugs are given when, and general resus progress. I assumed there would be hundreds of these apps out there, but when it came down to it, I could only find a few that fitted the bill. Here I compare three iOS apps for this purpose: Full Code Pro by American Heart ...
Source: Life in the Fast Lane - June 27, 2014 Category: Emergency Medicine Authors: Tessa Davis Tags: Application Education eLearning Emergency Medicine Equipment / Technology Featured Health Informatics iOS iPad iPhone App Reviews TechTool code apps Code CPR Code Runner Full Code Pro Resus TechTool Thursday Source Type: blogs

iPhone home screen, latest iteration: added @LaunchCenterPro. pic.twitter.com/ZrL3btopxg— Joshua...
iPhone home screen, latest iteration: added @LaunchCenterPro. pic.twitter.com/ZrL3btopxg — Joshua Schwimmer, MD (@joshuaschwimmer) July 14, 2014 Posted on infosnack.
Source: Kidney Notes - July 14, 2014 Category: Urologists and Nephrologists Authors: Joshua Schwimmer Source Type: blogs

iPhone home screen, latest iteration. New apps: @TimefulApp and @BetterMtn....
iPhone home screen, latest iteration. New apps: @TimefulApp and @BetterMtn. pic.twitter.com/uhOYPQNDss — Joshua Schwimmer, MD (@joshuaschwimmer) June 29, 2014 Posted on infosnack.
Source: Kidney Notes - June 29, 2014 Category: Urologists and Nephrologists Authors: Joshua Schwimmer Source Type: blogs

The iPhone Effect - when mobile devices intrude on our face-to-face encounters
You've probably experienced this. You're in the middle of telling your friend a story when his eyes flick across to his phone. Perhaps he even picks it up, checks the screen. "Sorry, go on," he says. But your flow is interrupted. And you know his mind is at least half elsewhere.Shalini Misra and her team approached 100 pairs of people (109 women; average age 33) in cafes across Washington DC and neighbouring districts. They asked them to chat for ten minutes at a table in the cafe about a trivial topic (plastic festive trees) or about the most meaningful events of the past year. For each pair, the researchers observed from...
Source: BPS RESEARCH DIGEST - August 4, 2014 Category: Psychiatrists and Psychologists Authors: Research Digest Source Type: blogs

what a world RT @joshuaschwimmer “The best Gmail app for the iPhone is now made by...
what a world RT @joshuaschwimmer “The best Gmail app for the iPhone is now made by Microsoft” http://t.co/uANMCr4Tt1 — borborygmi (@nickgenes) January 29, 2015 Posted on infosnack.
Source: Kidney Notes - January 31, 2015 Category: Urologists and Nephrologists Authors: Joshua Schwimmer Source Type: blogs

iPhone App Will Track Sexual Activity and Reproduction
<div style="font-size: 11.1999998092651px; line-height: 19.0400009155273px;">Apple recently announced that they will update their health app, HealthKit, to include reproductive health. Many were critical of the original app because although it can track a wide range of health indicators, such as BMI, sleep, sodium intake, number of falls, etc., it neglected reproductive health. Specifically, <a href="http://fusion.net/story/100781/apple-ios-update-new-version-of-healthkit-still-doesnt-track-periods/">it is problematic</a> that the app includes some obscure health indicators, like s...
Source: blog.bioethics.net - June 29, 2015 Category: Medical Ethics Authors: Hayley Dittus-Doria Tags: Health Care Reproductive Medicine Fertility gender Sex and Sexuality syndicated Women's Reproductive Rights Source Type: blogs