Majority of medical apps won’t be FDA regulated

FDA adopts riskbased approach to medical app regulation

App catalogs are flush with titles that allow users to play doctor, but according to the FDA, most of them are harmless and don’t warrant regulatory oversight. Instead, the agency has announced that it’ll take a more reactive, risk-based approach and will only require approval for mobile apps that “present a greater risk to patients if they do not work as intended.” Specifically, the FDA will scrutinize apps that perform the functions of regulated medical devices — such as an ECG monitor — along with those that are used as accessories to regulated medical equipment. As a telling statistic, only 100 mobile apps have received FDA clearance within the past decade, so imagine what would happen to the agency’s workload if it tried to exercise control over the Apple App Store and Google Play Store combined.

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Via: The New York Times

Source: FDA

The US Tylenol Problem, Visualized

The US Tylenol Problem, Visualized

In the last 10 years, 1,500 Americans died after taking too much of one of—nominally—the world’s safest drugs: acetaminophen or, as you might know it, Tylenol. This viz goes a long way to explaining why that’s the case.

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Endomondo “investigating” iPhone 5s M7 fitness chip potential

Fitness tracker app Endomondo is weighing the potential of Apple’s M7 coprocessor in the iPhone 5s, the company has confirmed, though the latest update for iOS 7 does not make use of the motion-tracking chip. The company, which released a new version of the Endomondo iOS app on Wednesday with flatter graphics in keeping with […]

ASICS’ Adaptive Running App Trains You By Learning From You

ASICS' Adaptive Running App Trains You By Learning From You

If you’re looking for guidance in creating a running plan, there aren’t a whole lot of ways you can go. You could cut something out of a magazine, you could use a stock program that comes with an app, or you could pay serious coin for a personal trainer. ASICS thinks it’s got a better way.

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Moves fitness tracker app jogs onto Android

Fitness tracking app Moves has made the jump from iOS to Android, bypassing dedicated hardware and instead relying on your smartphone’s plethora of sensors to monitor movement and location. The app, which has already been downloaded 2.5m times for iPhone and which – Moves developer ProtoGeo claims – is tracking double the steps each day […]

Google Calico takes on mortality with Apple chairman’s help

Google has launched Calico, a new “moonshot” company aiming to extend human life and putting Apple chairman Art Levinson at the helm as CEO and founding investor. “With some longer term, moonshot thinking around healthcare and biotechnology, I believe we can improve millions of lives” Google CEO Larry Page said of the new company, while […]

Calico: a new Google company focused on extending life expectancy

Calico a new Google company focused on extending life expectancy

Google’s making a long-term business bet that, at first glance, may seem out of the ordinary: it’s getting into healthcare. Its new company, Calico, will be focused on addressing the illnesses affecting the geriatric community, as well as aging in general. In Google CEO Larry Page’s own words, the new enterprise, headed up by current Apple and Genentech chair Arthur D. Levinson, is geared towards “moonshot thinking around healthcare and biotechnology,” so expect some pretty futuristic developments to come from the initiative.

In an interview given to Time magazine, Page said that Calico will re-evaluate traditional thinking and approaches to healthcare, like cancer research, the advancement of which he concludes might “not [be] as big an advance as you might think.” Page isn’t dismissing that vein of research altogether, but claims any cures could only add about three years to a survivor’s life — a trivial gain in the long-run. Though he was willing to go on record with what’s wrong with the current state of healthcare R&D, Page wouldn’t elaborate as to what future products Calico could produce, saying only that Google, with its vast resources, should be doing more to contribute to the world’s greater good.

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Source: Google

Can Specially Stitched Socks Stop Shuffling Seniors From Stumbling?

Can Specially Stitched Socks Stop Shuffling Seniors From Stumbling?

It’s a bold claim, but a Japanese company called Terumo claims to have developed a special type of sock that can stop shuffling seniors from tripping over low obstacles like rugs or the edge of carpets. The secret is a custom sewing technique that causes the wearer to feel an upward pull on the front of their feet, which in turn helps shift their center of gravity back towards their heels, improving balance.

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Nissan Nismo Concept Watch unveiled, monitors your health and social networks

Following the rising popularity of wearable devices, Nissan has just launched its own Nismo Concept Watch ahead of the Frankfurt Motor Show this month. But rather than doing the normal things you think a smartwatch would do, the Nisma Concept’s features focuses on keeping tabs on both the car and driver’s status in order to […]

Kiwi Wearables Shows Off A Way To Use Its Personal Tracker Device To Make Music

kiwi-hardware

Single-function wearable devices are old-school and a massive waste of potential, according to a new Toronto-based startup called Kiwi Wearable Tech that’s building a hardware device as well as a cloud-based platform for leveraging data gathered from their wearables to build a wide variety of different experiences. The Kiwi team was at the Disrupt Hackathon this year, and built a demo app to show the power of its platform, which translates motion captured by its device into music using cloud-stored MIDI files.

Kiwi co-founders Zaki Hasnain Patel and Ashley Beattie say that the hack can use any kind of instrument that can be made into a MIDI-based output, and that since it works via the cloud, it’s possible for a number of “players” to use Kiwi-based instruments simultaneously for collaborative music creation.

The purpose of Kiwi is to turn its Move platform into something that developers can use to build a wide range of apps – you could have a fitness-tracking app like RunKeeper use it to track your activity, for instance, then use it for monitoring motions during a baseball swing in order to try to derive the optimal body movement for big hits, and then have the same device turn on your connected home lighting system and activate your home theatre when you get home using a series of gestures (in addition to measuring movement, the Kiwi Move can detect things like double taps on this surface and sides, too).

That’s only the beginning, however. Patel and Beattie say that they’re working on ways in which the Kiwi could help with early alerts for health problems – detecting heart attacks in advance, for instance, by keying into early warning sings. Beattie says that current methods make it possible to detect a heart attack up to 13 hours in advance, and that working with developers in the medical community, Kiwi could be able to provide a warning at least roughly 3 hours ahead of time, based on their current research. It’s another example where they’d be relying on the community to take advantage of their platform to advance the possibilities, but it’s an interesting example of what could be accomplished by not limiting wearable tracking to just a single purpose.

Kiwi has yet to ship any hardware, but it has a working prototype, is currently taking pre-orders via its website and plans to launch a crowdfunding campaign on September 24. Kickstarter is their target crowdfunding platform, since its launch in Canada and high-profile makes it a good option for a Toronto-based startup, but says it could consider other options, as well.