A smartphone app that
launches this week from the health insurance companyAetna helps
users monitor their own health-tracking data. As costs spiral upward,
health-care companies could eventually turn to such apps as a way to encourage
healthy behavior.
At a
Mobile Summit in San Francisco last week, Martha
Wofford, consumer platform vice president at Aetna, said the company
would launch an app called CarePass to serve as a portal for an individual’s
health-related activity and, if he allows it, his medical records, too.
Through CarePass, a person
could enter a health goal—say, fitting into his jeans next month—and get
personalized suggestions for how to go about achieving it. CarePass can
integrate data from wearable tracking devices like Fitbit or Jawbone’s UP, as
well as apps like MapMyRun; it can take into account doctor visits,
prescriptions, and blood pressure or cholesterol records. It will also point
users to trustworthy symptom and diagnosis information through iTriage,
software that Aetna acquired last year.
A few
other health-care providers, such
as Kaiser Permanente, are getting into this area, but Aetna appears
to be pushing forward more quickly than most. CarePass, for example, will
include APIs so that patients can give access to their data to third parties,
including doctors or other software developers, Wofford says.
Nearly
50,000 health-related mobile apps are already out there, letting people collect
data about their well-being and interact with doctors and pharmacies from their
mobile devices.
With
the entire U.S. health-care system under pressure to reduce costs, insurance
companies could start creating financial incentives for people to voluntarily
share this data and improve their health and fitness.
President
Obama’s Affordable Care Act, Wofford says, allows insurers to increase
so-called “wellness incentives” to up to 30 percent of a premium, up from 20
percent before. This would allow employer health plans to create bigger
“carrots” for their employees to go to the gym or use a Fitbit. Under U.S. law,
incentives have to be based on behaviors—say, joining a gym—rather than
outcomes, such as losing 10 pounds versus two pounds, Wofford says. The same
rules do not apply in Europe.
CarePass
will be offered to individuals at first, but Aetna plans to launch a portal for
employers, too. There they will receive anonymous and aggregated data about the
overall health trends of their employees, Wofford says.
As
health-care costs increase for employers as well, they are likely to become
more aggressive in looking for ways to reduce costs.
“I
think it will be led by employers,” says Wofford. “We see some more aggressive
employers like Safeway, where they are driving outcomes by swabbing the cheeks
of employees to see whether they are smoking or not.” U.S. law says that smokers
can be charged higher premiums.
More
data is not enough to improve health outcomes, however. And the data can be
difficult to make use of. Zeo, a company that made a sleep-tracking device, and
which was a pioneer in this area, recently went out business because people
found its data too complicated to understand, Wofford says. “If we make it
convenient enough, the question is whether we can actually drive behavior
change,” she says.
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