UAE’s Mulk Healthcare launches global 'e-hospital'

UAE’s Mulk Healthcare launches global 'e-hospital'
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Wednesday, July 8, 2020

 
 
Person holding smartphone with CVS app and pill bottle with heart drawn around them

CVS Pharmacy app introduces feature for people with visual impairments

By Mallory Hackett

CVS Pharmacy has announced Spoken Rx, a new feature to its app that can read a specific prescription label out loud for patients with visual impairments or who cannot read standard print labels.

CVS plans to add RFID labels to its prescriptions at 1,500 pharmacy locations by the end of 2020. These smart labels can be scanned by the Spoken Rx feature in the app and then read out loud in either English or Spanish.

Spoken Rx will be available in all CVS Pharmacy locations by the end of 2021, the company says.

To enroll in the free program, people can either call into the pharmacy or go into the store for assistance.

The development of Spoken Rx was assisted by the American Council of the Blind, which helped CVS test the technology.

“Spoken Rx is a positive step that offers same-day, access for prescriptions filled in CVS stores, allowing for a greater level of privacy, safety, and independence for blind and visually impaired customers of all ages,” said Kim Charlson, the immediate past president of the American Council of the Blind, in a statement. “We’re pleased about this addition to the existing braille, audio, and large print accessible prescription label offerings provided by CVS Caremark and CVS.COM.”

WHY THIS MATTERS

Approximately 12 million adults in the U.S. are visually impaired, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. As time goes on, these numbers are only expected to go up as the population of older people increases, the CDC cites.

With this program, those with visual impairments will have access to important medical information like medication name, dosage and directions.

THE LARGER TREND

There have been many technological advancements in recent years to assist people with visual impairments.

San Diego-based Aira makes assistive wearables that harness artificial intelligence and augmented reality for people who are blind or who have low vision capabilities. In 2017, the company secured $12 million for its smart glasses that stream what a blind or visually impaired person would see to a remote agent for assistance.

OrCam has a series of devices that can look at objects, analyze them, and explain them to the user via an electronic voice. The company’s MyEye 2.0 can read text to the user, recognize up to 100 stored faces, identify products at the store based on packaging or bar codes, and identify the amounts of bills. It can even identify the colors of garments to assist with shopping.  

In the realm of pharmaceuticals, AdhereTech created a smart pill bottle that encourages adherence through light signals, audible chimes and text message reminders.

ON THE RECORD

“The in-app feature gives patients more flexibility, providing the pertinent prescription information out loud wherever and whenever they need it,” Ryan Rumbarger said in a statement, the senior vice president of store operations at CVS Health. “Spoken Rx provides a more seamless experience to our patients who are visually impaired.”

Young woman talking on a smartphone

Return-to-work app uses voice samples to screen for respiratory illness symptoms >>

By Dave Muoio

A new app announced this morning by PureTech Health spinout Sonde Health will listen to employees' voices to determine whether they have a potential respiratory condition and shouldn't return to work.

The Sonde One app combines a COVID-19 questionnaire, user-reported temperature and a six-second voice sample to render its judgement and provide guidance to the employee.

These guidances can be customized to fit each employer's work policies, with an option to generate unique QR codes that an employee would need to present upon arrival to ensure screening compliance. Each employer-specific version of the app will be available for download on either the App Store or Google Play.

“At Sonde, we believe that voice is a vital sign and a meaningful predictor of health,” David Liu, CEO at Sonde Health, said in a statement. “By analyzing a few seconds of speech, we can detect subtle changes in a person’s voice caused by common symptoms of respiratory disease. We built this capability into the Sonde One app so organizations can provide their employees with simple, fast and effective COVID-19 monitoring in their pocket.”

To kick things off, Sonde Health said that it has already partnered with Wellworks for You, a company that provides corporate wellness products to 1.4 million individuals through its clients. Among the first to roll out the tool will be 5,000-person technology-products and services provider SHI International in August.

WHY IT MATTERS

As COVID-19 cases continue to mount in most states and employers lay out their return-to-work strategies, a new market has presented itself to companies specializing in health-screening technologies.

In addition to its novelty, Sonde's recently patented voice-based software platform is more scalable and easier to deploy than strategies that would rely on hardware. It also comes with the added benefit of voice-based identify verification, which, along with the QR code functionality, could help employers enforce compliance with their new policies.

THE LARGER TREND

Sonde Health's entrance into this new market was predicated by similar services from well-known health and technology firms. Within the last month alone, Fitbit announced its device- and app-driven Ready for Work solution, Verily unveiled its Health at Work digital analytics and testing-coordination product, and CVS Health came out with an end-to-end digital service called Return Ready that provides an on-site testing option.

But the big names aren't alone in targeting this new employee COVID-19 screening market. Zebra Technologies and VitalTech each unveiled digital health efforts early in the month that focus on employee proximity and contact tracing, and on at-home symptom checking, respectively.

 

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