One health app to rule them all?
This article first appeared in the November 2014 issue of Pulse+IT Magazine.
Despite popularising smartphones in the consumer market and developing the iOS ecosystem in which many health and fitness apps exist, Apple cannot claim to be an early entrant into the field of consumer health. In fact, the company lags long-time rivals Google and Microsoft’s efforts to provide health services to consumers by many years.
This is not to say that being a trailblazer in the health informatics space presents the fastest route to success, with the Google Health offering being shut down in 2011, just a few short years after being launched, and Microsoft’s HealthVault platform only being supported in a limited number of overseas locations despite launching seven years ago.
Launched as a flagship component of iOS 8, Apple’s Health app is the consumer-facing component of its HealthKit developer environment, which the company describes as allowing “apps that provide health and fitness services to share their data with the new Health app and with each other. A user’s health information is stored in a centralised and secure location and the user decides which data should be shared with your app.”
While data sharing between the plethora of health and fitness-related services has existed for some time, the number of services that have sprung up over the past few years has led to an exponentially large number of possible interactions between these various offerings, with many app developers only able to support interfaces with a handful of the most popular third-party offerings.
To read the full story, click here for the November 2014 issue of Pulse+IT Magazine.
Posted in Australian eHealth