Apple aims to help medical studies with ResearchKit software framework

Apple will not see any of the health data collected by apps developed with ResearchKit

Apple introduces ResearchKit, giving medical researchers the tools to revolutionize medical studies

Apple introduces ResearchKit, giving medical researchers the tools to revolutionize medical studies

Apple thinks its new software framework can solve some of the biggest challenges facing medical researchers, including recruiting people for studies and collecting health data more frequently.

Called ResearchKit, the framework will allow developers to create apps for medical research studies and turn a smartphone into a diagnostic tool, Apple said Monday during an event in San Francisco. ResearchKit will be released as open source next month and the first five apps are available today, said Jeff Williams, Apple's senior vice president of operations. Because it's releasing ResearchKit as open source, apps can be developed for mobile platforms other than iOS, such as Android.

Apple teamed up with several hospitals to develop the initial apps, said Williams. For example, Massachusetts General Hospital helped create an app for diabetics and Mount Sinai Hospital in New York City worked on an app for asthma patients. The other apps involve studies dealing with cardiovascular disease, breast cancer and Parkinson's disease.

The apps allow smartphone users to participant in medical research experiments. The app for Parkinson's disease, for example, runs a test that uses a phone's gyroscope and accelerator to measure a person's gait. Another test run by the app measures hand tremors by having a person tap on a phone's screen. Parkinson's disease affects the nervous system and impacts a person's ability to move. Tremors are a symptom of the illness.

With a person's permission, ResearchKit also accesses medical data that's collected from an iPhone, Apple Watch and apps developed with the HealthKit software framework.

Apple will not see any of the health data the apps collect and people decide what experiments they want to participate in and how they want to share information.

Disease symptoms change constantly and using the data collected from a smartphone can give doctors more frequent and accurate data, Williams said. ResearchKit will allow for large-scale medical studies and give health care providers access to greater cross-sections of the population, he said.

Fred O'Connor writes about IT careers and health IT for The IDG News Service. Follow Fred on Twitter at @fredjoconnor. Fred's e-mail address is fred_o'connor@idg.com

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