Sarah Perez@sarahintampa
/ February 11, 2019
Apple announced this morning it has partnered with the
U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) to make the Health Records feature on
iPhones available to veterans. The deal will allow veterans to view their
medical information across participating institutions, including the VA,
organized in the Apple Health app.
These health records
include allergies, conditions, immunizations, lab results, medications,
procedures and vitals, and will be displayed alongside other information, like
Apple Watch data. This gives VA patients a more comprehensive view of their
medical history and health data, Apple says.
The medical information is also
secured through encryption and protected by the iPhone user’s passcode, Touch
ID or Face ID.
Apple was reported to be in discussions with the Department of
Veterans Affairs about this deal back in November of last year. At the time, it
was said that in addition to the health record integration on iPhones, Apple
would provide engineering support to the agency.
The partnership is a big win for
Apple, as it provides the iPhone maker a means of reaching the more than 9
million veterans currently enrolled in the VA’s system across its 1,243
facilities. It also represents another success by the company in terms of
getting healthcare institutions to support its Health Records feature on
iPhones. Today, that list includes a
growing number of hospitals and clinics across the U.S.
The Health Records feature on the
iPhone will be the first record-sharing platform like this available to the VA,
Apple also noted.
“We have great admiration for
veterans, and we’re proud to bring a solution like Health Records on iPhone to
the veteran community,” said Tim Cook, Apple CEO, in an announcement about the
new partnership. “It’s truly an honor to contribute to the improved healthcare
of America’s heroes.”
“When patients have better access to
their health information, they have more productive conversations with their
physicians,” added Jeff Williams, Apple’s COO. “By bringing Health Records on
iPhone to VA patients, we hope veterans will experience improved healthcare
that will enhance their lives.”
A number of tech companies over the
years have tried to offer platforms for centralizing health records, but have
faced challenges because of the fragmentation across the industry, as well as
other technical hurdles. Google Health, for example, closed down in 2011 after
failing to gain traction. To combat these issues, Apple has been putting
together individual deals with various institutions to get them to
support the Health app’s Health Records feature, following its January 2018 launch. However, the
partnership with the VA is one of Apple’s most significant deals to date.
Apple is not the only major tech
company today involved in the healthcare space.
Despite past failures with Google Health,
Google parent Alphabet has current investments in life sciences (Verily) and
anti-aging (Calico). It also recently hired a prominent hospital-system chief executive, David
Feinberg, to oversee Google’s larger healthcare efforts. Amazon, meanwhile,
last year teamed with JPMorgan Chase and Berkshire Hathaway
to create a new healthcare company, and acquired online pharmacy PillPack for $753 million. And Microsoft develops software aimed at healthcare organizations powered by
Microsoft 365 and Azure. It also runs a competing health records solution,
called HealthVault.
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