The Journal of mHealth Vol 3 Issue 1 (Feb/Mar 2016) | Page 21

Industry News EU Working Group Aims to Draft Guidelines to Improve mHealth App Data Quality The European Commission has set up a working group to develop guidelines for assessing the validity and reliability of the data that health apps collect and process. The guidelines will form part of the follow up work that resulted from the Commission's Green Paper on mobile health which was published in 2014. The Green Paper and the subsequent stakeholder consultation identified safety and transparency of information as one of the main issues for mHealth uptake. As the market develops the large number of lifestyle and wellbeing apps available, combined with no clear evidence on their quality and reliability, is raising concerns about the ability of consumers to assess their usefulness. This could limit the effective uptake of mHealth apps to the benefit of public health. Ensuring quality of the data that health apps collect and process is also essential for linking apps to electronic health records and for their effective uptake in clinical practice. In two open stakeholder meetings (on 12 May 2015 and 6 July 2015), stakeholders confirmed that it would be useful to work on common assessment methodologies for mHealth. The guidelines that the new Working Group will develop are expected to build on existing initiatives and best practices in Europe. The group will seek to provide common quality criteria and assessment methodologies that could help different stakeholders (users, developers, vendors of electronic health record systems, payers etc.) in assessing the validity and reliability of mobile health applications. In order to fully benefit from the mobile health apps that people increasingly use to monitor their lifestyle and health status or to manage their chronic disease, it should be possible in the future to link data from these apps to the electronic health records. This means that patients would be able to give access to their health professionals to consult the data collected by the apps. Also, health professionals need the reassurance about the reliability of the apps, in order to be able to recommend apps to their patients and take apps' data into consideration in a treatment/monitoring process. As a result of a public call for expression of interest, which closed on 04 December 2015, the Commission received 75 applications. 20 of them were selected taking into account the balanced representation of relevant know-how and areas of interest in order to ensure the highest level of expertise, as well as gender and geographical balance. The group will have its first meeting in March 2016. The guidelines are expected to be finalised by the end of 2016. n UK Government Announces New Funding for a Paperless NHS More than £4bn of funding has been set aside by the UK government in a new attempt to create a paperless National Health Service. The funding will be used to improve areas such as electronic records and online appointments, prescriptions and consultations. Full details of the funding are still being agreed between the Department of Health and NHS England, but the aim will be to allow patients to book services and order prescriptions online, access apps and digital tools and choose to speak to their doctor online or via a video link. In announcing the additional funds, Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt said doctors found filling out paperwork and bureaucracy ‘frustrating’. The initiative is expected to include: »» £1.8bn to create a paper-free NHS and r emove outdated technology like fax machines »» £1bn on cyber security and data consent »» £750m to transform out-of-hospital care, medicines and digitise social care and emergency care “We know that proper investment in IT can save time for doctors and nurses and means they can spend more time with patients," he told the BBC's Andrew Marr Show. Continued on page 20 The Journal of mHealth 19