STAT September 20, 2019
Dana G. Smith

An app for monitoring people with bipolar disorder and schizophrenia is so precise it can track when a patient steps outside for a cigarette break or starts a romantic relationship — and where that new partner lives. Another app, meant to screen for suicidality, analyzes not only text message metadata, but also the content of the conversations.

While these smartphone trackers are being developed through academic research projects, which require patients to give informed consent before sharing intensely personal information, mental health apps without such safeguards are already on the market for depression, anxiety, PTSD, and other conditions.

Many of these apps have a common problem, say experts on health technology: They put patients’ privacy at risk while providing marginal...

Today's Sponsors

LEK
ZeOmega

Today's Sponsor

LEK

 
Topics: Apps, Digital Health, Mental Health, mHealth, Patient / Consumer, Provider, Technology
CBT-based app helps children self-manage anxiety through ‘quests’
AI Medical Note-Taking Apps Enjoy Healthy Wave of Investment
Nearly a year since launch, Apple’s Vision Pro still searching for a killer app
4 Tech-Enabled Strategies to Improve Patient Medication Adherence in 2025
Hospital at home needs an 'Uber app,' Mayo Clinic leader says

Share This Article