Much of the big news in health IT this year came out of the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT. ONC -- along with CMS -- is in charge of overseeing the widespread adoption of EHRs through the meaningful use program. After years in the works, the first phase of that program is wrapping up right now.
The past several years were almost frantic for HIT and ONC, with meaningful use standards, interoperability standards, incentive funding and a succession of creative and dynamic national coordinators, each with their own focus on what needed to be accomplished.
Unlike other Executive departments, Medicine has been fortunate to have a clear path, relatively clear goals, and minimal political divisiveness......all to the benefit of our patients.
mHealth has had an explosive growth in mobile applications for iOS and Android. The hardware form factors are multiple with stiff competition and new hardware offerings almost monthly.
Growth and competition are plentiful and numerous manufacturers (Nokia, Windows, Google, Motorola,iPhone) in smartphone or pc tablet form. In many cases EHR vendors have rapidly developed a mobile app portal. The acceptance rate has been high for those who are tech savy. Despite the potential vulnerability to a security breech and all that HIPAA stands by on the sidelines ready to pounce with a hefty penalty. The plain truth is that these applications and hardware offer so much to efficiency a way needs to be found quickly to certify HIPAA compliance for each application and device.
Not withstanding this urgent need there have been several attempts to regulate this market. FDA, FTC, FCC, and HHS have all been mentioned. Suffice it to say that regulatory agencies are pressed to stay current with new hardware and devices.
Why, How and Which Mobile Health applications need regulation?
In an article (blog post) in June 20012 I discussed Five Reasons Why Digital Health Technologies Need FDA Oversight Now the FDA is in the process of forming a mobile health division to study, certify and authenticate applications. A new workgroup in HHS has been formed,
According to mobiHealthNews;
"The workgroup’s efforts will likely end up affecting the regulation of mobile health and health IT. According to HHS, FDASIA requires Sibelius, with the ONC and the FCC, to “develop a report that contains a proposed strategy and recommendations on an appropriate, risk-based regulatory framework for health IT, including medical mobile applications, that promotes innovation, protects patient safety, and avoids regulatory duplication.” The new workgroup’s input will feed into that report.
According to Brian Ahier,
"As a general matter FDA regulates all medical devices and FCC regulates devices that utilize electromagnetic spectrum - i.e. broadcast devices. So with regard to mobile health devices - sensors, applications, systems - FDA regulates any given device as a medical device while FCC regulates the device as a communications device.
Recognizing the potentially overlapping jurisdiction in digital health, in 2010 the agencies entered into a Memorandum of Understanding "to promote collaboration and ultimately to improve the efficiency of the regulatory processes applicable to broadband and wireless enabled medical devices."
Last month FCC announced its mobile body area network (MBAN) proposal, which would allocate electromagnetic spectrum for personal medical devices (see link below). The allocated spectrum would be used to form a personal wireless network, within which data from numerous body sensors could be aggregated and transmitted in real time."
Representative Marsha Blackburn (R-TN) and others introduced The Software Act.which will act to build a cohesive multi-agency over view of mHealth.