Should Medical Apps Be Regulated? 254
maximus1 writes "There's a tidal wave of medical-related apps coming to smartphones and tablets that will be used by doctors and patients alike. But how should the medical establishment deal with them? Neurologist Steven Levine, currently working on an app for stroke victims, thinks they should be treated like new medicines: developed using scientific peer review and subject to regulation by the government or professional associations. Obstetrician Kurian Thott, developer of an app called iRounds that helps communication between doctors, thinks they should be released quickly and the market should decide which take off. What do you think?"
We no longer regulate ads and mail order products. (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:We no longer regulate ads and mail order produc (Score:5, Insightful)
So why regulate apps?
Because regulation artificially narrows the supply, making the profits more lucrative for the incumbents. You did notice the guy pushing for regulation was a doctor already doing apps. Once he's in, regulation is good for him.
Oh, I misunderstood your question. You were looking for a good reason to regulate apps. Sorry, I can't help you there.
Re:We no longer regulate ads and mail order produc (Score:5, Insightful)
Uh, the other guy who DIDN'T think that regulations were needed was - also a doctor.
Personally, I don't think you should regulate these. Who's going to do it? How many friggin 'lawyer' screens are you going to create (hint: more than we already have)?
Do you then regulate every 'medical' website? Most of these apps either could be duplicated by a web site or already have been.
Where, exactly, do you stop?
What happens when doctors or even medical professional societies disagree (think stroke treatment with clot busting drugs - the American Academy of Emergency Physicians and the American Neurologic Society (or whatever prof society the neurologists hang out on) disagree pretty vehemently. That's fine, it's expected but how do you 'regulate' that?
Re:We no longer regulate ads and mail order produc (Score:4, Insightful)
If an app takes metrics, the metrics must be authenticated because that metric could mean life or death.
Those are the apps we are talking about here, not the calorie counters or shit where you input the info.
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When is software a device?
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Actually Medical apps need to be regulated because their accuracy needs to be verified. If an app takes metrics, the metrics must be authenticated because that metric could mean life or death. Those are the apps we are talking about here, not the calorie counters or shit where you input the info.
Actually, Medical advice needs to be regulated because your friends and relatives' accuracy needs to be verified.
If a family member takes your temperature, it must be authenticated because that measurement could mean life or death.
Those are the people we are talking about here, not the Weight Watchers or self help books.
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> Uh, the other guy who DIDN'T think that regulations were needed was - also a doctor.
Well saying that one person or groups recomendation is self-interested doesn't make any specific claim about every member of the group or profession. It can be self interested, and still not supported by everyone who would benefit. (this is what always perplexes me about people who simplify down to "why should they be against welfare, they recieve it, they would lose out if it went away".... yes... but that doesn't mean
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I don't know why the US can't accept "on license" and "off license" variants of things like restaurants, medicine, etc.? As a customer of an off-license product, you're basically saying: The regulatory agency hasn't approved this and I don't care. If M.D.s want to put their malpractice insurance to the test and use off license apps, let them.
Re:Personally Think (Score:2)
"Personally, I don't think you should regulate these."
See, this is a really tricky topic because almost unlike any other category, people's lives are at stake. I know it's fun to joke about "snake oil" (see posts above) but "old school legit doctors" are pretty good, so an app they use could directly affect a patient's life. Remember, this was "Medical Apps", not just "communication between people who happen to be doctors". So I'd want a review of a "Medical App" because so help me if it includes "advice to
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And most normal people would love to break $100k...
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Patients have been self-diagnosing for as long as doctors have existed. I'm guilty of it myself, and won't usually see a doctor unless I think the doctor will actually be able to do something. (no point in seeing a doctor for a runny nose, it's probably just allergies or a cold... if it's allergies the doctor can't do anything other than give me the antihistamines I'm already taking, and if it's a cold, no self-respecting doctor will give me anti-virals for something my body can heal on its own in a few day
Re:We no longer regulate ads and mail order produc (Score:5, Insightful)
Because regulation artificially narrows the supply
And artificially strips out dangerous or faulty procedures, chemicals etc. before they experience the joys of the free market on the public who have to enjoy the burdens of what's happening. Because your medical information is *private* and letting anyone have at your private medical information without any regulation means that information could be used against you.
Because letting people take random chemicals to see if some of them cure whatever disease they have definitely isn't a good idea, but it's cheap, so we could do that.
It does however depend a lot on what apps actually do. I'm not sure you need to highly regulate the applications used by medical professionals to handle payroll or scheduling or room booking. There are custom software packages for a lot of those because all hospitals face similar problems and so on, so it makes sense then to not have to completely re-engineer your payroll system just because your hospital is not the hospital one block over. But if you're talking about tracking a patient's blood sugar and providing advice based on that tracking you're into a whole collection of privacy rules (how secure is this data? Who am I sending the data to?) and providing medical advice from something that isn't a medical professional.
Which tends to show they're talking past each other a bit. The one doctor is making an app to deal with strokes, that's almost certainly into the category of medical advice (at least potential medical advice) and tracking a lot of deeply private medical information. The other guy is helping doctors communicate information between rounds, so there are privacy implications, but he's not necessarily intending that information to ever actually see a patient.
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What relevance is the number 195,000? It's meaningless unless you can compare it to the percent of deaths from preventable medical mistakes in other countries.
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What do consumers get out of regulation? It isn't safety. It isn't privacy.
As someone who has had to deal with HIPAA and FISMA regulations, I can attest firsthand that these regulations do give patients privacy with regards to your medical information.
And if you think the FDA isn't keeping medicine safe, I suggest you start buying it from alternate sources. Like strange men selling medicine out of their trunk in the Walmart parking lot. That is the "free market" at work!
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Re:We no longer regulate ads and mail order produc (Score:4, Insightful)
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HIPAA only matters if the app is storing PHI and it is being used by a covered entity. So apps targets at patients won't run afoul of HIPAA. They can keep every bit of PHI that you put into them and not have to run any special protections. It also means that if such an app were on the iPhone there's no legal issue if this data is backed up on the iCloud. Apple would not have to suddenly meet new data storage requirements to meet HIPAA standards.
Lawyers aren't covered entities either so if your personal inju
Re:We no longer regulate ads and mail order produc (Score:5, Insightful)
If the app impacts diagnosis in any way it is no longer just an app, it's a medical device, and subject to regulation.
This doesn't even begin to speak to patient data stored locally in an app and current HIPAA regulation.
The DSM-IV, which is simply a list of diagnostic criteria for psychiatric disorders, is available in e-book format as an "app". Is that app a medical device? What about a paper copy of the DSM-IV that I carry around in my pocket? Is that a medical device, too?
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Re:We no longer regulate ads and mail order produc (Score:5, Insightful)
We are on our way to regulating everything, anyways.
I can't even be astonished by new cries for regulation. It is a very sorry world we are creating. We push aside religion for being too invasive and controlling and then ask the government to be even more invasive and controlling than the religion could ever hope to be.
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Ideology *is* a religion, or at least it is for the masses. The sociopaths preaching the holy writ of Party platforms are just using it as a tool.
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It is a very sorry world we are creating. We push aside religion for being too invasive and controlling and then ask the government to be even more invasive and controlling than the religion could ever hope to be.
Nobody expects, er, remembers the Spanish Inquisition!
The "government" is the electorate, and the electorate's demand for regulation is in response to the unregulated's history of abusive practices.
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Posted using HTTP over TCP/IP. Oh the irony.
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At least the government doesn't try to sell us an imaginary god.
No, it doesn't. However, it tries to sell us a whole other pile of imaginary bullshit.
Getting together and making rules is fine.
Do I start singing the Schoolhouse Rock theme here?
The problem with religion is all the fraud and deceit regarding an afterlife and supernatural beings.
True. However the problem with government is all the fraud and deceit regarding trillions of dollars and slaughtering people and destroying lives.
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Said the guy who's mom didn't take Thalidomide.
FDA (Score:5, Informative)
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Speaking as someone who works as a mobility specialist in the medical products industry, the FDA already issues guidance in this area. It won't be long before the guidance turns into regulation.
Speaking as someone who works as a mobility specialist in the medical products industry, the FDA already issues guidance in this area. It won't be long before the guidance turns into regulation.
There are plenty of categories of medical software that already require FDA certification.
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They can try to regulate apps, but they will run smack dab full tilt into the fan blades of First Amendment law if they try.
If money is free speech, then so is code.
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If money is free speech, then so is code.
your code is only speech if your money speaks loudly enough...
is your phone treated like a new medicine? (Score:2)
no? why should the communication you're using for non-emergencies be regulated? (actually you're phone is supposedly regulated so that anyone can call 911 with it).
the apps that are just glorified pamphlets shouldn't be reviewed any different than regular pamphlets, of course, but it's not like you're going to eat the application and if it gives some wrong advice then you're as publisher on the same hook as if you produced a snake-oil pamphlet I suppose.
I don't think the paper that came with my glucose mete
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I'm sure there will come a day when we in IT are forced to be certified to work on any server\computer that contains patient data
You aren't already? I'm pretty sure around here you have to have some sort of official training, though I'm not sure whether that is a token online 1 hour course or something actually involved.
I'm a comp sci researcher and to do *anything* with human subjects, even just having them look at different colours on the screen and tell us which ones are the most visible requires giant piles of paperwork about anonymizing data, data retention rules, access controls, etc. etc. Which is why I don't do that, it's n
In a word: yes. (Score:5, Informative)
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I don't know if that's the right approach. I'd treat it like any ol' website: if you just believe what the first site you find says about some complex medical issue, that's your own problem. I'd appreciate if the official government agencies have some guidelines on how to identify scammy apps and which apps are useful, but other than that, I'm comfortable with the idea that it's just information in a snazzy new package, and as such, cannot and should not be controlled.
That said, anything that is officially
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AcnePwner was downloaded 3,300 times at a cost of 99 cents in the Android Marketplace.
There were about 11,600 downloads of AcneApp from the iTunes store, which cost $1.99.
According to the settlement, Koby Brown and Gregory W. Pearson of DermApps are required to pay $14,294,
and Andrew N. Finkle of Acne Pwner must pay $1,700.
$2,800 sales revenue - $1,700 fine = $1,100 profit
$16,158 sales revenue - $14,294 fine = $1,864 profit
Not the most profitable fraud.
They should have gone into finance.
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Wouldn't that already fall under the provisions of existing law? AFAIK, fraudulent misrepresentation of a product is already a crime. It seems like damages arising from the use of an app would fall under provisions of tort law.
If some medical service provider is going to deploy a smart phone app as a diagnostic or treatment tool, then it's up to the app developer and the user to negotiate a contract and the terms of liability issues. I don't see why Big Brother needs to be involved.
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Yes, if your process for getting rid of scammers also adversely affects my ability to market something that isn't a scam.
Regulation is a blunt instrument, and it should not be the tool of first resort.
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If people did their own research they could decide for themselves.
If people were capable of doing their own research properly there wouldn't be a need for Let me Google that for you [lmgtfy.com].
Even *WITH* solid research people still institutionally do stupid things Homeopathy shouldn't get NHS funding [sciencebasedmedicine.org] (n.b. the first line of that article links to the proper source, but the article I linked is a bit more readable) and yet it's STILL sort of covered by the NHS.
Sorry, but the reason we have professional researchers who get paid to it is because most people can't.
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I can imagine a world where that might be okay, but only with one condition: if something does get tested by the FDA and it's rejected, it should have to be labelled "REJECTED BY THE FDA" and not just "NOT FDA APPROVED," which is ambiguous (perhaps the sticker "NOT EVALUATED BY THE FDA" could be used too.) Wouldn't you want to know if research had been done on a given product?
To be fair, I do understand wariness around the FDA. There are a lot of very close corporate ties that have been a source of trouble
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Seems to me that the parents is right. These need to be regulated.
They are. There are already existing laws against fraud.
Your problem seems to be that you disagree with the fines imposed. How could making yet another law be the right answer to that?
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Certification (Score:2)
Why not just release new apps without any regulation, then have them voluntarily certified by a trusted party.
Then medical professionals can choose between new, as-yet-uncertified apps and ones that have been certified.
Yes and No (Score:5, Insightful)
On the other hand, Apps that help you track things (Say your glucose levels) or tracks your prescriptions - don't need that added cost / regulation.
I'd be curious to see - are the big companies pushing for this? FDA approval isn't cheap OR fast. Small innovators are able to disrupt this market which has been held strongly by the giant medical firms - who can't be quick and innovate.
We have a fine line to walk between stifling innovation and regulation.
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"Medical Apps" is a broad range of things. Apps that make medical decisions for you certainly should be. Are they making a diagnosis? Telling you treatment? Yes.
On the other hand, Apps that help you track things (Say your glucose levels) or tracks your prescriptions - don't need that added cost / regulation.
So, in one case, you're basically calling for the regulation of what amounts to medical advice (also known today as WebMD.com), and yet, you do not find it necessary to regulate the app that tracks if you've had your meds today or not?
Seems to me an problem in the software in either situation could prove equally as deadly. Either choose to regulate them or do not, but half-assing it is simply asking for liability to come your way.
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But diagnostic tools ... diagnose.
Diagnostic tools should be regulated as they make treatment recommendations. Apps that are basically glorified note pads that happen to record personal medical data like glucose levels should not. If what they replace are regulated they should be regulated.
Hippa rules (Score:2)
Hippa rules do you really want apple to have a backdoor to your medical info?
popular != quality (Score:3)
Kurian Thott, developer of an app called iRounds that helps communication between doctors, thinks they should be released quickly and the market should decide which take off.
I'd rather have medical professionals who are also coders looking at the source code to make such decisions, rather than the ignorant public that is too easily influenced by marketing tactics.
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I have a medical degree, but I only practised for about 18 months. I knew that I hated the profession during my studies, but by then I was already in the hole for 4 years so I thought I'd tough it out and maybe things would get better.
I don't have a computer science degree but I like to think that I'm a better programmer than I was a doctor. I'm definitely a better programmer than the average doctor-who-now-programs, having seen the source code of quite a few of them. I have selection bias though, I work fo
Not like people will die w/o regulation (Score:2)
It's not like an unregulated marketplace, with limited liability, will mind if a few patients die due to a coding error.
After they privatize the profit, stuff it in their kids trust funds and retirement funds, and walk away while people die.
Socializing the risk and lifetimes of pain and misery on the rest of us. ... oh. ... wait ... It is.
real apps or wrappers? (Score:2)
app for stroke victims
What is that? A ebook, a sleazy spreadsheet app, or a MRI remote control app with special features for head scans?
Some apps are basically just an ebook. They should be regulated as much as medical book publishing (in other words, none at all).
I suppose someone could build a X-ray controller app that zaps patients. That needs a intense regulation, as much as the xray machine itself. There's a long history of killing people with buggy medical device software.
Then there's relatively sleazy stuff in the mid
When people's lives depend upon software... (Score:2)
There are different kinds of medical apps (Score:2)
Warning labels? (Score:2)
I can't see why we can't go with a simple compromise, and have unapproved apps present big huge warning labels saying they hadn't been approved by the FDA, and once they do, they can put a big huge FDA logo of approval.
I know some people will, on their own risk, ignore those warnings, but I think that's something they need to realize on their own.
So, yes, I think they should be regulated, but only insofar as to allow people to make informed decisions on their risks.
Fear of Competition (Score:2)
"Neurologist Steven Levine, currently working on an app for stroke victims, thinks they should be treated like new medicines: developed using scientific peer review and subject to regulation by the government or professional associations."
Of course. He's afraid of competition. Government regulation will slow that down. We wouldn't want to empower people!
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Actual he want's people to get accurate information for their health.
He is developing the App from a grant for PCORI.
But, you keep with your crazy conspiracy nonsense. Sure, you would stop innovation that would help people for money, but don't assume everyone else would.
Yes. (Score:2)
Next question, I'm on a roll.
Doctors aren't smart enough for apps (Score:2)
Follow the liability (Score:2)
If a medical person uses an app and takes an action (or chooses not to act) on the basis of information they got from an app, who's liable for anything that goes wrong? I would expect that the medic in question would get the blame and I'd also be surprised if their professional insurance would kick in to pay for any damages that ensued.
I would also expect that any professional organisation would be advising its member to NOT use any app that had not passed some sort of approval regime. So on that basis, ig
They are. (Score:2)
As a person coding a project going through the FDA clearance process, we have 1000+ pages that show that they *are* regulated.
Intelligent Bureaucracy (Score:2)
I helped write code for the Plex-ID system, which among other things can identify every virus and bacteria in your spit by their genetic profile; spit in the tube, put it in the machine and wait an hour. CE (European Union) and FDA have similar requirements for a diagnostic device. But the FDA is pro-active and monitors development as it happens, where as CE takes a look at the paperwork once you are done and doesn't get in the way unless something goes wrong (in which case they come down hard, is what I
Depends, (Score:2)
Hell F%&^$#g No! (Score:2)
They should be subject to provisions of existing law, such as fraudulent misrepresentation of the product. For instance, I read about an app that claimed it could make your phone cure acne or something. That's no different than digital snake oil.
Creating an FDA type process for apps? Forget it.
Just add a fitting punishment for failure (Score:2)
Just add a fitting punishment for life-threatening failures. Like the CEO of the affected company must sit in a vat of spiders (imported from Australia), until he promises to fix the problem.
Regulation has two faces (Score:2)
Regulation is necessary on a good many things.
However, the degree of regulation must be carefully weighed.
In any industry, adding regulation means:
1. Higher cost to the consumer
2. More boredom of paperwork for employees, so often lowered standards
3. More bureaucrats and other unimaginative people in power
If we regulate anything, we should make our rules short and clear and the approval process fast and supportive of industry, or we shoot ourselves in the foot.
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"so often lowered standards"
no, that's false.
" our rules short and clear "
except life and science isn't 'short and clear' . Making short in clear your goal cost in terms of conciseness.
I can say 'eat better' but what does that really mean scientifically?
Take the obvious route (Score:3)
Any app that claims to either itself be a cure/treatment, or which directly interfaces with a system that is (or is already subject to regulation), gets regulated. So a "game" that claims to treat dementia, or an app that interfaces with a medical records system needs to be regulated, or an app that connects to a pacemaker for diagnostics, would need regulation.
Anything that simply offers medical information or rudimentary "advice" is fine. So a WebMD-type app would need no regulation, although it could still cause liability if it's wrong to the point of causing physical harm.
Basically, replace "app" with "book" and see if it makes sense.
"This book contains a list of diseases, cross-indexed by symptom. It does not need to be regulated."
"This book contains the complete medical history of everyone who has ever visited this hospital. It should be subject to basic regulation regarding patient privacy."
"This book allows the doctor to control an implanted medical device. It should be strictly regulated, including stringent testing and controlled distribution."
Why apps? (Score:2)
People taking advice from medical (and "medical") websites are pretty similar, internet is the ultimate app after all. But in a sense, all mass media give medical advice, sometimes just ads disguised as them. Should be all regulated? If so, what you do with other countries websites and/or media? In any case, you end in doing media control without control on your side (and that includes promoted medical advice to push products from paying companies, is not like that never happened in a way or another).
Inst
Easy (Score:2)
there should be 'Official Approved Scientific Based' process.
You don't have to get it, but getting it means you have been vetted by the proper specialists.
Medical apps are far to wide of a area to classify them all. O I need scientific vetting for my app the emails my Dr.? no.
Should I get one that's giving me, or my Dr, advice on my medical condition? IN many case, yes.
the courts will regulate this (Score:2)
Re:"the market" (Score:4, Insightful)
The market is slow to make decisions, because it relies on the input of everybody involved. That's as opposed to government bureaucracy which makes bad decisions relatively quickly and then forces those bad decisions down everyone's throat.
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The market is slow to make decisions, because it relies on the input of everybody involved. That's as opposed to government bureaucracy which makes bad decisions relatively quickly and then forces those bad decisions down everyone's throat.
That's interesting. I'd always had the impression that the market resembled a stampeding herd of lemmings. Frequently making bad decisions (VHS anyone?) and forcing them down everyone's throat ("Nobody ever got fired for buying IBM!").
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The market is slow to make decisions, because it relies on the input of everybody involved. That's as opposed to government bureaucracy which makes bad decisions relatively quickly and then forces those bad decisions down everyone's throat.
I honestly can't tell if you're trolling or not.
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I'm dreaming, aren't I ?
Not at all, that's the goal of both doctors. The problem is that both regulating and not regulating have advantages and disadvantages.
A few dozen patient deaths caused by a buggy app and the FDA will step in.
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A few dozen patient deaths caused by a buggy app and the FDA will step in.
Any doc who blindly trusts an app without double-checking deserves to have his license revoked. It's our job to double check files, nurses and even doses of medications because not only is it our ass on the line it could also be the patient's life. If you blindly rely on an app to think for you you might as well let the smart-phone treat your patient.
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you might as well let the smart-phone treat your patient
What if that's the point of the app, and the patient doesn't see a doctor due to cost or 'ideological differences'? Granted, that is basically the case for regulation, because individual doctors can't, and don't, oversee absolutely everything used on their patients all the time, and aren't qualified or capable of knowing if everything is working anyway.
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You mean like the App the runs the EKG machine?
How about the app the detects blood pressure?
Dr. use software built into devices all the time.
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I don't want a $1.99 app making guesses. That's no better than snake oil.
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I don't want a $1.99 app making guesses. That's no better than snake oil.
I don't want stupid people running around taking medical advice from an app, but you don't see me complaining. I see it as cleansing of the gene pool. Even snake oil has its purpose among the ignorant.
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Except those apps often clean the gene people of OTHER people, not the person using the app.
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I don't want a $1.99 app making guesses. That's no better than snake oil.
What do you think doctors do?
Granted, it's typically an educated guess, but a guess nonetheless.
Having had suffered from gallbladder disease for a decade, and having "doctors" throw every pill under the sun at the problem (without doing any real diagnosis), my trust in their assumed omniscience is lacking.
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So why are MRI machines also cheaper in medical systems that are more regulated than the US's, like Scandinavia's? Could it just have something to do with the US being particularly inefficient, not the role of government per se?
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Someone grab the duct tape and shut this guy up.
FDA gets involved, and a $1.99 app will be $1,999. Seriously, look at MRI machines. They can cost millions of dollars. This technology is 30 years old. By now a unit should cost a mere $50,000.
In the U.S. an MRI can cost upwards of a $1,000. In India it costs $50-$100.
No we need less FDA regulation, not more.
Once had to have both an MRI and a CT scan - same clinic, same expense (~$3000 each).
I called to ask why the MRI was so expensive, and they told me "Because it's new technology."
I also asked why the CT scan was so expensive - they told me "Because it's old technology."
Call it a hunch, but I doubt regulation has much to do with it.
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A) You might want to understand what it takes just to run and maintain a machine
B) It's 1000 dollars because that's what hospitals can get.
C) India has a much stronger socialize medicine program.
None of that has to do with good regulation. The high cost is private industry mark up and middle men mark up, and a profit margin.
As far as the app goes:
A) We are talking about app the dispense medical advice, or make medical evaluations based on input.
B) as an App, is doesn't have the 'you can only use it in one p
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That's silly. Not everything gets cheaper at the same rate as computers. MRI scanners cost a lot of money because of the physics involved.
Much of the cost of an MRI is the technician doing the scan and the radiologist reading it. In the US there's also profit for whoever is doing it - many American medical providers use imaging as a high profit service that offsets less profitable things.
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" Cutting out "snake oil" is not much of an issue with professional medicine anymore."
BWAHAHAhahahahha.. No, it's still there, and it's making a comeback in some circles.