Showing posts with label health. Show all posts
Showing posts with label health. Show all posts

Friday, October 7, 2011

Why I Love Tonic: Julie Desch, Palo Alto, California


I'm 50 years old with cystic fibrosis (CF). A lot has been discovered lately to help people with CF, and I benefit from much of it. The problem is that it seems the more that is discovered, the more there is to remember to do. New medications, new types of treatments, more emphasis on exercise, more aggressive treatment of lung infections with IV antibiotics...it all takes time! Add normal activities of life to this, and chaos easily ensues. Serious organization is required, and Tonic fits the bill. Cystic fibrosis is not an easy illness to live with, but Tonic makes it more manageable. -- Julie Desch, Palo Alto, California

Monday, October 3, 2011

Meet Tonic's Creator: Rajiv Mehta

If you've been in an app store lately - whether Apple or Droid - you know there's no shortage of apps for your health. So it takes something pretty special to stand out among the thousands. That's what Rajiv Mehta has achieved in creating the Tonic self-care app, which has been recognized in MIT's Technology Review, Shape magazine, and as winner of the “Best Mobile Health Solution for Behavior Change” at this year's Mobile Health 2011 conference. Raj's earlier work has also been featured in the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal.

Here's a short Q&A with Raj about how Tonic came to be, and what it aims to do:

Q: There are so many apps out there, and, as you know, a rapidly growing number of health-related apps: Why did you create Tonic - what was missing in the marketplace?

Rajiv Mehta: Most health apps provide content. Of the rest, those that do support reminders or tracking are invariably narrowly focused; they just focus on diabetes, or medications, or pain, for instance. In contrast, Tonic helps you remember and record all of your health activities. No other app that I know of provides the flexibility necessary to support real-world health. In the real world, we often have multiple conditions and varied activities (medications, diet, exercise, etc.) Only Tonic supports all of this.

Q: Why did you choose the name Tonic?

Raj: Tonic has many good attributes for a name. It’s evocative, something that is uplifting and invigorating. It has a nice sound, and feels good as you say it. It is also memorable, and different from the thousands of prosaically-named health and wellness apps.

Q: If you could tell people using this app one thing, what would it be?

Raj: Make full use of Tonic’s flexibility to support your life. Remember that while you’re using it for ongoing, chronic health issues, it can also support you in managing temporary problems like colds, flus, and sprained ankles. One user told me today that she even uses Tonic to track her car mileage along with her meds!

Q: As you know, a tonic is something that enhances your vigor or well-being - Tell us: What's your Tonic?

Raj: A game of Ticket To Ride with the family. This is a fantastic board game where you compete to complete the most and longest train routes.

Monday, September 26, 2011

Why I Love Tonic: Michael Nagle, Somerville, MA


"I first saw Rajiv's app Tonic at the Quantified Self Conference. What impressed me about it there was its flexible design -- Raj noted that the majority of chronic illness patients have 2 or more conditions, yet most apps are designed for a single-condition. Tonic appeared to me to be unique in that it let people still keep track of a daily health practice, especially complex ones, yet let people input their own schedule (rather than have to use an exercise app, a diabetes app, and so on to keep track of their various care practices.) I've since become interested in the possibility of using Tonic as a way to help people keep track of health practices that are especially individualized -- like treatments for back pain, where the stretches and exercises you do are very unique to the individual. I suppose to sum up I'd say that the design in Tonic from a user experience point of view was by far the most impressive app I saw at the Quantified Self conference. I'm a fan and hope to work with it more!" -- Michael Nagle, Somerville, MA

Friday, September 2, 2011

Review: CureTogether.com

CureTogether is an advertising-free website that helps you learn from other people with similar health conditions, concerns, or questions. People from around the world have shared information on nearly 600 medical problems, diseases, and questions - like how to eliminate caffeine, or make changes to your diet. You can see the symptoms they're experiencing, the treatments they're trying, and most important: how effective the solutions they've tried have been. So you benefit from a crowd-sourced take on what's really worked (and what hasn't) from this growing community. If you want you also can contribute your own experiences anonymously.

Since I've been looking to improve my sleep (see "Bobbing for Sleep"), I looked up "insomnia" on CureTogether and found that over 4,000 people had shared their experiences in dealing with insomnia. The graphic above summarizes the popularity and effectiveness of a wide range of treatments that these people had tried to sleep better. It was reassuring to find that many people find exercise effective. The information on CureTogether is not going to tell you exactly what will work for you, but it can be helpful in identifying things you might try.

Company: CureTogether
Website: http://curetogether.com
Price: free

Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Book Reviews: "Over-Diagnosed" and "Worried Sick"

These two books -- one recently published, the other dating back to 2008 -- raise profound questions about current medical practices, and conclude that the healthcare system is often causing far more harm than good. Most people in the healthcare industry are unlikely to agree with these authors—otherwise these books wouldn't have had to be written—but both are authored by highly-respected doctors with deep experience, and they resonate strongly with me.

In Over-Diagnosed: Making People Sick in the Pursuit of Health (2011), Dr. Gilbert Welch, and co-authors Dr. Lisa Schwartz and Dr. Steven Woloshin, write that “[they] believe overdiagnosis is the biggest problem posed by modern medicine.” Overdiagnosis is defined as “when individuals are diagnosed with conditions that will never cause symptoms or death.” Which means that “there’s nothing to be fixed—[the patient] will neither develop symptoms nor die from his condition—so treatment is unneeded. An overdiagnosed patient can only be harmed.”

The authors point out that the medical community has been constantly moving the goalposts, changing the threshold at which a person is labeled as having some medical condition, such that ever more people are diagnosed. For example, a person was once said to have diabetes when his fasting blood sugar level was 140. When the threshold was changed to 126 an additional 14% of the population was defined as having diabetes. Similar changes in thresholds have led to a 35% increase in hypertension, a 86% in hyperlipidemia (high cholesterol), and a 85% increase in osteoporosis in women.

The consequences are enormous, write the authors: "[Overdiagnosis] has led millions of people to become patients unnecessarily, to be made anxious about their health, to be treated needlessly, and to bear the inconvenience and financial burdens associated with overdiagnosis. It has added staggering costs to our already overburdened healthcare system." The authors also note enormous obstacles to fixing the problem: financial gains from all the unneeded treatments; blind faith amongst doctors in existing practices; a legal environment that punishes under-treatment but not over-treatment; and popular media that promotes the types of practices that the book decries.

In Worried Sick: A Prescription for Health in an Overtreated America (2008), Dr. Nortin Hadler writes that “we are at grave risk of what I call 'Type II Medical Malpractice'—doctors doing the unnecessary, albeit very well (as opposed to Type I Medical Malpractice, which is doctors doing the necessary unacceptably poorly.)”

Hadler argues that we must change our social perceptions of what it means to be well, that we should not medicalize every deviation from some imagined state of perfect health. “To be well is not to be free of symptoms—of morbidity—continuously or for long periods of time," he writes. "It is abnormal to escape heartburn and heartache, backache and headache, sad days and days when we’re aware of our bowels...we are challenged to cope with these predicaments of life and of living.”

Hadler labels himself a "revolutionary," and uses strong language to denounce many widely accepted medical practices as a “vast marketplace for unnecessary and unproven remedies” and what he terms “disease mongering.” Not only do doctors treat us unnecessarily and inappropriately, they make it more difficult for us to be well. “To be well is to be able to cope with morbid episodes. And coping may not be easy. It can be thwarted by the intensity of the morbidity, or by complicating and confounding factors,” continues Hadler. Standard medical advice, which makes you worry that you are sick, being one of the major confounding factors.

Both books urge that there should be much less “medicalization” of the normal ups and downs of health, and that more efforts be focused on helping people cope, without drama. In Over-Diagnosed, Welch concludes: “[H]ealth-promotion efforts need to be judged using a broader set of parameters than is traditionally used for medical care. My coauthors and I would rank highest those health-promotion efforts that lead people to feel more resilient, either physically or emotionally. By resilient I mean feeling strong, able to participate in and enjoy the life you lead—and capable of meeting and dealing with adversity when it comes.”

Both of these books resonated strongly with me. The more I have looked into the science behind today's healthcare practices, the more I have learned how weak the foundation is. Skilled doctors are certainly in a far better position than the average lay person to deal with medical emergencies. But, for day-to-day health we would be much better off discarding simplistic health rules, and instead empowering and enabling people to lead themselves, to "cope" as Dr Hadler puts it, or to be "resilient" as Dr Welch says.

Thursday, August 25, 2011

Rajiv Mehta, creator of Tonic, in today's New York Times

If you caught the article, "A Dashboard for Your Body," in the August 4 edition of the New York Times, you saw writer Farhad Majoo's profile of five mobile health apps that track a variety of health-related metrics, including calorie burn, weight, body fat, body temperature, blood pressure, and more.

Rajiv Mehta, creator of the Tonic Self-Care App, wrote in response to the NYT article, noting that many of the tools profiled in the piece focused on long-term tracking of health, while millions of Americans -- especially those with chronic diseases like diabetes, high cholesterol, and arthritis -- also need help tracking day-to-day health, symptoms, and staying on top of tasks like adhering to a medication regimen. See below for Raj's letter to the paper, and tell us what you think!






Tuesday, August 16, 2011

The Rise in Consumer Health Mobile Apps

What new health technologies are consumers using, and how do they help? Rajiv Mehta, co-creator of the Tonic Self-Care App, covered this topic at a recent panel discussion on mobile health technologies held in Silicon Valley, in California.

"Self-quantifiers are at the forefront of managing their health, by taking advantage of the latest technologies," said Rajiv. Self-quantifiers, such as those that participate in the Quantified Self, keep track of various aspects of themselves and their lives, with the expectation that they will learn something, and often experiment with small changes in their lifestyle, diet, medications, and more to see if they can improve their health. Some focus on specific issues such as pain and sleep, while others are more concerned about more general conditions such as alertness and mood.

Rajiv went on to give an overview of the thousands of mobile tools available today, each generally focused on some specific issue. There are devices for tracking physical activity such as Philips DirectLife, FitBit, BodyMedia, and Basis; for tracking sleep such as Zeo and WakeMate; as well as improved devices for common measurements such as weight and blood pressure from Withings. And tracking apps like LoseIt! for weight and diet, RunKeeper for exercise, Foursquare for location, Equanimity for meditation, GlucoseBuddy for glucose and insulin, and I'm Expecting for pregnancy.

Health is something we deal with every day, and though it is commonplace, it is incredibly, and increasingly, complex, stressed Rajiv. "The fact is that many people have much more than just a single specific health issue to deal with," he said, noting that Tonic addresses this need for simplifying the complex, adding that there's a need for both tools like Tonic, that provide the foundation for day-to-day self-care, and for rich, focused tools like those above that are used as needed for specific problems.

You can watch the full video here;, Rajiv's talk begins at 42:20.



Or you can view the slides from the presentation here:

Friday, August 12, 2011

Tonic Gets a Shout Out in Shape Magazine

We're excited to share some news: The Tonic Self-Care app was just covered in the August issue of Shape magazine, one of the country's biggest fitness magazines! The brief write-up (look for it on page 90) gives the magazine's readers (women interested in fitness, health, and nutrition) a quick overview of what the app can do. What do you use Tonic for?