Care at Home
Face to face.
From anywhere.
Face to face.
From anywhere.
Apple devices make staying connected between visits simple and seamless. Advanced sensors and built-in features give care teams powerful insights into patient health and encourage patients to lead healthier lives. With Apple, providers get a more complete picture of patient health and can offer more personalised care.
Keep patients close.
And their progress closer.
Corrie Health app helps lower readmission rates. With the Corrie Health app, care teams can monitor cardio recovery after a heart attack and deliver evidence-based guidelines and education for patients. The platform reduced the chance of readmission to 6.5 per cent — significantly lower than the United States standard.*
Connect with patients. Mac makes it easy for providers to conduct remote telehealth visits and deliver care seamlessly through Hyperspace on Mac.
At-home treatment plans. Patients can tap into the familiar, easy interface of their Apple devices to follow personalised treatment plans you create at home.
Remote observation. Patients can share their health data from their iPhone and Apple Watch through the Health app with their care teams. This allows you to easily and remotely monitor conditions within the patient’s chart in your electronic medical records.
Be alerted when things change. Providers can receive notifications for any significant changes, such as high heart rate or irregular rhythm notifications, as well as trends like increasing blood pressure readings for possible intervention.
Epic’s MyChart app helps providers monitor chronic conditions. The medical team at Ochsner Digital Medicine uses MyChart, HealthKit and medical devices like blood pressure cuffs to monitor patients with hypertension and diabetes. Patients can track their blood pressure and blood sugar levels from home and their care teams can make adjustments to their care plan with data coming directly to the patient’s electronic medical record.
Patient data is clearer than ever. Access up-to-date health data in an easy‑to‑read format from within your organisation’s EHR system.
Complement your patient portal. The Health app can use the same login credentials supported by your organisation which makes authentication simple and has the potential to drive awareness and adoption of your patient portal.
Records are easier to search. View a timeline of your patient’s health history that includes lab results, immunisations and medications, even if the data is from different health institutions.
Built with industry standards. Apple uses the SMART on FHIR (Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources) standard. Downloadable data types include allergies, conditions, immunisations, lab results, medications, procedures and vitals. Data types for sharing with providers include exercise minutes, heart rate, blood pressure, lab results, immunisations and more.
Share data securely. When your patients share Health app data with a provider, it’s encrypted in transit and at rest, and Apple can't access or view any data stored in connection with the provider sharing data.
Seamless integration with our EHR makes it easy for our caregivers to view, understand and incorporate relevant information into the patient record.
Randy Gaboriault
Senior Vice President, Chief Digital and Information Officer, Christiana Care
See a snapshot of their health.
Or several.
Heart Rate app. Apple Watch checks for unusually high or low heart rate and helps patients identify situations that may warrant further evaluation. If a patient’s heart rate is above 120 bpm or below 40 bpm while they appear to have been inactive for 10 minutes, they will receive a notification. Patients can adjust the threshold bpm or turn these notifications on or off. All heart rate notifications — along with date, time and heart rate — can be viewed in the Health app on iPhone.
I’m inspired by the life-saving potential of technology and applaud Apple’s innovation and commitment to health. Capturing meaningful data about a person’s heart in real time is changing the way we practise medicine.
Dr Ivor J. Benjamin, FAHA
Past President of the American Heart Association
ECG app. The ECG app uses an electrical heart sensor on Apple Watch to record an electrocardiogram of the heart to help patients identify signs of atrial fibrillation (AFib). Patients can record a single-lead electrocardiogram from their wrist in the moment they are experiencing symptoms like a rapid or skipped heartbeat. They can also make note of symptoms, and easily share the ECG result with their doctors.
Irregular heart rhythm notifications. The irregular rhythm notification checks for signs of irregular rhythms that may suggest AFib. This feature won’t detect all instances of AFib but may provide patients with an early indication that further evaluation may be warranted. Irregular rhythm notifications use the optical heart sensor to detect the pulse wave at the wrist and look for variability in beat‑to‑beat intervals when a patient is at rest. If the algorithm repeatedly detects an irregular rhythm suggestive of AFib, the patient will receive a notification and the date, time and beat‑to‑beat heart rate will be recorded in the Health app.
Fall Detection. The advanced accelerometer and gyroscope in Apple Watch use motion sensors to detect hard falls and automatically notify emergency services and emergency contacts if the person is immobile for about one minute.
Crash Detection. Apple Watch uses its accelerometer, gyroscope, sensors and advanced motion algorithms to detect severe car crashes. It automatically calls emergency services and alerts emergency contacts if a crash is detected and the person is unconscious or unable to reach their iPhone.
Emergency SOS app. Apple Watch helps people easily call for help and alert emergency contacts if they need to. When someone makes an Emergency SOS call, it allows emergency personnel to access real-time location data from iPhone and Apple Watch to quickly locate them when they need help.
Medical ID. When people set up Medical ID in the Health app, emergency personnel can access a user’s critical health information — like allergies and medical conditions — from the Lock Screen of iPhone or the Home Screen of Apple Watch. They can also see names and contact information of the user’s designated emergency contacts.
Sleep tracking. Apple Watch uses an accelerometer to look for breathing disturbances while someone is sleeping. If a patient consistently experiences elevated breathing disturbances over a 30-day period, they receive a notification letting them know that they may have sleep apnoea.
Sleep apnoea. Patients with sleep apnoea experience repeated disruptions in their breathing while they sleep. These breathing disturbances are fairly common, and people typically experience a few disturbances a night. One’s alcohol intake, upper respiratory illnesses and even some medications can lead to elevated breathing disturbances.
Notifications. If they receive a notification, patients can see when sleep apnoea may have occurred and get information on the importance of speaking with their healthcare provider about it — along with a detailed report to support that conversation. And all of these insights are secured in the Health app.
A clinical-grade Hearing Aid. AirPods Pro 2 now provide an easy-to-use, clinical-grade Hearing Aid capability for patients with perceived mild to moderate hearing loss. The Hearing Aid feature makes adjustments that improve the clarity of nearby voices and sounds, and patients can customise settings — like amplification, balance and tone — to their needs.
Hearing tests from home. When paired with an iPhone or iPad, AirPods Pro 2 offer a scientifically validated Hearing Test. Patients can test their hearing in the comfort of their home in about five minutes and receive easy-to-understand results and insights. AirPods Pro 2 also provide active Loud Sound Reduction across listening modes to help prevent exposure to loud environmental noise.
Private and secure. All Hearing Test data is stored in the Health app on a patient’s device. They can retake the test whenever they want, monitor their hearing over time, download their test results and read helpful articles about hearing health.
Their health, on track.
Apple Watch is the everyday fitness companion. Apple Watch tracks and monitors 18 different areas of health and fitness, from heart health to sleep trends, daily steps, cycle tracking and more. Patients get a complete picture of their health and inspiration to develop positive habits — no matter their fitness level or goal.
Workout app. Advanced motion sensors track performance data across a wide range of modalities and automatically detect popular activities like walking, running, cycling, swimming and more. People also have access to advanced metrics and powerful training experiences like Heart Rate Zones and Custom Workouts.
Activity rings. The Activity app tracks fitness goals and encourages patients to close their rings every day. People can easily pause and adjust their goals for each day of the week.
Lasting change. A study by the RAND Corporation showed that 34 per cent of participants using Apple Watch increased their activity level by an average of 4.8 days per month and experienced behaviour changes that continued over 24 months.
150+ types of data. From sleep tracking to daily steps, heart rate and more, the Health app serves up interactive charts, accessible explanations and articles that make understanding complex health metrics easy.
Trends. The Health app creates trend analysis reports for 20 types of data, from resting heart rate to sleep to cardio fitness — and highlights and alerts patients to significant changes over time.
State of mind logging. Patients can log emotions and daily moods using the Health app’s engaging visual selector, and see correlations with lifestyle factors like time spent in daylight, sleep, exercise and mindful minutes.
Sleep tracking. Apple Watch features an accelerometer — a sensor that measures micromovements — to estimate time spent in bed and time spent asleep, and even detect when patients are in Core, REM or Deep sleep as well as when they might have woken up.
Cycle Tracking. Patients can log their period, record symptoms and track cycle factors like lactation. It can also help predict when their next period or fertile window will begin as well as estimate when they likely ovulated.
Vital metrics. The Vitals app helps people identify changes in their daily health status. Patients can quickly see their key overnight health metrics right on their wrists — including heart rate, respiratory rate, wrist temperature and sleep duration.
A central view. The Health app lets patients share their overall health and medical history with their providers by organising and storing more than 150 different types of health data and health records on their iPhone or iPad.
Patients can now collate health records from different medical providers and can show that information to their caregivers and care teams right from their iPhone. This effectively makes the patient a custodian of their own health data.
Dr Dan Perri, Chief Medical Information Officer, St. Joseph’s Healthcare Hamilton
Ontario, Canada
Health records. Patients can access their health records — including medications records, immunisations, clinical notes, lab results and more — all in the Health app. Apple works with EHR vendors at over 900 institutions to make it easy for patients to aggregate their records from multiple institutions and download a PDF to share with a provider, directly from the app.
Privacy. Your patients are in complete control of their data. Patients can decide which information is in the Health app, which apps can access their data and who they share their data with. Apple uses a direct, encrypted connection between the person’s iPhone and the APIs provided by the health system or clinic to access their health records. When your patients share Health app data with a provider, the data is encrypted in transit and at rest, and Apple cannot access or view any of it.
Take care. To the next level.
The Apple Health app provides a central and secure place for all of your patient’s personal health and fitness information, from health records to medications, labs, activity and sleep data.
MyChart gives patients easy access to manage their health and healthcare, including integrating patient-generated data from the Health app into Epic EMR. Care teams can use this data to monitor the patient remotely, and proactively intervene when necessary.
Corrie Health integrates with Apple Watch to give clinicians continuous updates on the status of a patient’s heart health when recovering from a heart attack.
Locus Health helps patients
and providers monitor safely at home with vitals tracking, targeted education and
remote communication.
Withings delivers comprehensive health insights that give patients a complete picture of their health — from heart rate to sleep analysis, activity, BMI and more.
Let’s discuss the best options for your care team.
Get in touch