The
Veterans Affairs Department plans to debut the first two of several
mHealth apps providing veterans easier and quicker access to healthcare
data via smartphones and tablets sometime early this fall.
The first app is called Summary of Care, the second is Blue Button. Both provide access to electronic health records, but Blue Button lets users create a PDF file to share data with non-VA providers, according to an article at Federal News Radio. The two apps, which are currently desktop applications available through the agency's My HealtheVet portal, received the highest grades from users during beta testing of eight mobile applications.
"We know that, at least in our pilot population, veterans wanted to have access on their mobile devices or use these applications to see their electronic health records," Neil Evans, the co-director of Connected Health at the Veterans Health Administration, told Federal News Radio. "We've learned from our experience that My HealtheVet patients value seeing their personal health data. We've also learned that they value it on mobile device through our family caregiver pilot, so it seemed a logical next step to deliver that experience nationally to veterans."
The first app is called Summary of Care, the second is Blue Button. Both provide access to electronic health records, but Blue Button lets users create a PDF file to share data with non-VA providers, according to an article at Federal News Radio. The two apps, which are currently desktop applications available through the agency's My HealtheVet portal, received the highest grades from users during beta testing of eight mobile applications.
"We know that, at least in our pilot population, veterans wanted to have access on their mobile devices or use these applications to see their electronic health records," Neil Evans, the co-director of Connected Health at the Veterans Health Administration, told Federal News Radio. "We've learned from our experience that My HealtheVet patients value seeing their personal health data. We've also learned that they value it on mobile device through our family caregiver pilot, so it seemed a logical next step to deliver that experience nationally to veterans."
"We have several other mobile applications that will be available to veterans over the coming year-plus," Evans told Federal News Radio.
Evans said the VA's app strategy reflects the growing use by patients who are increasingly tapping smartphones and mobile devices to track and monitor health and fitness efforts. He estimates 25 percent of his diabetic patients are using a mHealth blood-testing app for tracking sugar levels.
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