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Author Topic: The 'inside story' of Apple's ResearchKit  (Read 362 times)
HCK
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« on: March 20, 2015, 09:00:18 pm »

The 'inside story' of Apple's ResearchKit

<div class="field field-name-body field-type-text-with-summary field-label-hidden"><div class="field-items"><div class="field-item even" property="content:encoded"><p class="intro">ResearchKit seemed to come out of nowhere, but it only seemed that way...</p> <p>Medical research needed a way to reach more people more effectively. Tear-tag flyers on bulletin boards just weren't cutting it. The future was clearly in mobile devices — the personal technology more and more people had with them every day — and in the cloud — the servers that could bring it all together — but how could that future be brought into the present? <!--break-->Fusion:</p>
<p>Sitting in the audience [
of Dr. Stephen Friend's Standford MedX talk on September 27, 2013] was Mike O'Reilly, a newly minted vice president for medical technologies at Apple. A few months earlier, Apple had poached O'Reilly from Masimo, a Bay Area-based sensor company that developed portable iPhone-compatible health trackers. Now, he was interested in building something else, something that had the potential to implement Friend's vision of a patient-centered, medical research utopia and radically change the way clinical studies were done.</p> <p>After Friend's talk, O'Reilly approached the doctor, and, in typical tight-lipped Apple fashion, said: "I can't tell you where I work, and I can't tell you what I do, but I need to talk to you," Friend recalls. Friend was intrigued, and agreed to meet for coffee.</p> <p>The whole story is great, give it a read.</p> </div></div></div><img width='1' height='1' src='' border='0'/><br clear='all'/>

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Source: The 'inside story' of Apple's ResearchKit
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