If coming to US will need to integrate with Epic but can make money through ACA. Big lift but could have meaningful market impact. A lot of paper intake forms still being used.
@leanphilosophic Indeed. The challenge with integrating into EHRs has been getting data from the EHR, they makes it easier to supply them with our data but not as easy to get feedback, so we did something like a Software printer for the Front desk officer to send the Export to us and then we struggle with the text classification, which has to happen on-device, for privacy. Not a piece of cake, but It's about time. A PHR that works for patients is long over due.
Skip the waiting
Scan a QR code or Tap an NFC tag to check in and check out. Share your health record on arrival and leave with your diagnosis and prescription.
Security
Rest easily behind our encryption and freedom of control. Your data is encrypted on the cloud, you got the keys.
Control
Freedom to grant the hospital only required sections of your data and access expires after a set time limit.
Integrated
A single healthcare hub which gives you insights and warnings, and manages your appointments.
Reliability
You can always get your records back even when you lose your phone, and say goodbye to illegible handwritten notes.
Seamless
Transition to a new doctor or hospital and share your medical history in a minute
@farokh_shahabi Exactly, patients' data is a resource, but storing it is a risk, this is a means for hospitals to fix their data portability issues, without exposing themselves to privacy risks, since the patients still move around with their data and the hospitals don't keep it.
Hello looks great but what about privacy risks regarding hoarding sensitive data in a centralized way? Any plans on open sourcing to be able to vet the guarantees?
@mert_boyar Thanks a lot, Mert. The data is encrypted ⚔️, (Same way we've done it with all popular messaging apps for about a decade). When the user scans the hospital code, it is a public key to encrypt the data, so employees at Mage can't read the patients' data 👐.
This is awesome! Great idea and so useful. What's the requirements to roll it out in UAE and other countries - do you need government backing? Best of luck!
@pedrobh Thanks a lot, Pedro. UAE Health data privacy law is pretty straight forward, you need the user's consent and servers have to be situated within UAE.
@hypeken Yes, Perfect analogy, the hospitals simply take a look at the pages, and stamp the passport, but you get to keep it and decide what to show them. It helps the hospitals have a more complete view of your record, and helps you keep the control.
Not to mention it's cool and fast.