Ask HN: Help Me Build a Better Google Health
Hey HN,
I'm in the early stages of coding a simple medical/health tracker. The purpose of this project is really to both better my skills, and to offer a useful service. What'd I'd like to hear are some suggestions any of you may have as to what you'd like to see in a medical/health tracker, as well as frustrations you might've experienced using Google Health or other similar services. Anything from feature suggestions to criticisms of the idea in general are welcome.
I'm calling it Welloscope (http://www.wellosocope.com) and you can reach me at hi@welloscope.com if you'd like.
Thanks a lot.
10 comments
[ 12.6 ms ] story [ 1186 ms ] threadAnother group that can provide you good ideas is high-performance athletes.
You definitely need something that is a device or is installed on a mobile so people can add information without having to move to a website.
On the website you could show progress, suggestions and recommendations based on the aggregated data.
we consulted with some Swiss marathon champion and diets specialists when worked on running and body tracking apps
You might find your efforts better used in joining someone who's already made a lot of progress, like we have at PatientsLikeMe.
http://www.patientslikeme.com/about/careers
This is one of the big reasons that only Google and Microsoft are dueling it out over PHR standards--they have major legislative and regulatory affairs departments and fleets of lawyers to make sure they are covered legally.
(disclaimer: I'm working on an app in this space)
I think one aspect of a good solution is for identifiable patient data to be stored on a USB key or similar device. That way the patient must be present and must approve of all data access, and the patient can also access the data himself at any time. Some/most/all access could also involve an online service which stores non-private patient info and anonymized patient info.
The device could also be used to securely transmit data between providers. For example your doctor might put a cryptographically signed prescription on your key, which you take to the pharmacist to get filled. The doctor (or you) could also transmit the prescription electronically. When you get to the pharmacy, your key confirms that the prescription is for you.
This is the real reason only the big guys like google and MS are really trying this out IMHO, because they've got a big checkbox to face the potential legal ramifications of this problem.