Saturday, 6 April 2019

Wired.com/Paris Martineau: Alexa, What's My Blood-Sugar Level?

Wired.com
    Author: Paris MartineauParis Martineau
    business
    04.04.19
    07:32 pm

Alexa, What's My Blood-Sugar Level?
Bjarte Rettedal/Getty Images
Share

    206

Amazon may be known as the “everything store,” but the company’s tendrils extend far beyond ecommerce. On Thursday, Amazon said Alexa-enabled devices can now handle customers’ sensitive medical data, and it teased the release of a new kit that would allow approved outside developers to build Alexa skills that access users’ private health information, paving the way for the voice assistant to play a bigger role in health care.

With the announcement came the release of new skills giving Alexa the ability to relay and store blood sugar measurements from internet-connected monitoring devices, help schedule doctors’ appointments, pass on post-op instructions from hospitals, and provide prescription delivery updates by securely accessing customers’ private medical information.

As part of the announcement, Amazon said it had committed to protect personal health information according to the federal Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, or HIPAA, which protects the privacy of medical records. Alexa’s health and wellness team had been working to obtain HIPAA compliance for months. For now, only six companies invited by Amazon will be able to build skills that can access sensitive medical information, but Amazon expects to add more developers to that list in the coming months.

In a statement to WIRED, Amazon said that while the company applies multiple layers of security to all skill data—including encryption, access controls, and secure storage in the Amazon cloud—the health care skills data will be treated differently to meet HIPAA requirements. The company did not specify what additional measures are in place to ensure that users’ personal health information is properly identified and access to it is controlled and properly audited.

The move is a sign of Amazon’s growing ambitions in health care and consumer-facing uses of its technology. The company has made dozens of high-profile health care hires in recent years.

Since 2014, Amazon has been running a secretive lab dedicated to moon-shot-style projects in health care, like using machine learning to help prevent and treat cancer. The lab goes by at least three different names, depending on who you ask—including 1492, The Amazon Grand Challenge, and Amazon X—and it has worked on projects related to telemedicine and the development of health applications for Alexa-enabled devices, per CNBC. The group also reportedly spent years working on a tool to mine patient medical records for data to flag potentially inaccurate information and fill in gaps in a patient’s medical history for insurance companies, among others.

Last year, Amazon partnered with JP Morgan Chase and Berkshire Hathaway to launch a new health care venture—only recently given the name Haven—ostensibly designed to revamp health care while cutting costs.

In June, Amazon bought online pharmacy startup PillPack, which ships prescription medications directly to customers’ doorsteps, for $1 billion in cash. Amazon has also started selling medical supplies to hospitals and medical professionals.

In November, the company launched Amazon Comprehend Medical, a machine learning tool that mines doctors’ notes and patient health records for data about a patient’s diagnoses and medications. Change Healthcare, which works with pharmacies to process claims, used the service to predict which insurance claims were most likely to be denied, reports CNBC.
More Great WIRED Stories

    The best laptops, from MacBooks to Chromebooks
    Mar-a-Lago's security problems go beyond a thumb drive
    What Boston Dynamics' “Handle” robot really means
    “Why don't you want kids?” “Because apocalypse!”
    Ferrari built the track-slaying P80/C for a single customer
    👀 Looking for the latest gadgets? Check out our latest buying guides and best deals all year round
    📩 Want more? Sign up for our daily newsletter and never miss our latest and greatest stories

Related Video
Gadgets
Now Amazon's Alexa Can Show You Things

Instead of just yelling at you, Amazon's Alexa now can show you things with a new flashy screen. Here's WIRED's review of the Amazon Echo Show.

    #amazon alexa#Amazon#healthcare#Apple News Paid Exclude

View Comments
Sponsored Content

    Klint Finley
    Cloudflare Says Its New VPN Service Won’t Slow You Down
    Sponsored
    Gregory Barber
    Tracking Readers’ Eye Movements Can Help Computers Learn
    Sponsored
    Alex Baker-Whitcomb
    Facebook Takes On White Nationalism, Plus More in Tech News
    Sponsored
    Louise Matsakis
    Will Facebook’s New Ban on White Nationalist Content Work?
    Sponsored
    Klint Finley
    US Is Forcing a Chinese Firm to Sell Gay Dating App Grindr
    Sponsored

More business

    Growing Pains
    The Tricky Ethics of Google's Cloud Ambitions
    Author: Tom SimoniteTom Simonite

    Fiber Optics
    How Google Is Cramming More Data Into Its New Atlantic Cable
    Author: Klint FinleyKlint Finley

    Tech in Two
    Microsoft Employees Revolt, Beheaded Mosquitos, and More News
    Author: Alex Baker-WhitcombAlex Baker-Whitcomb

    Uprising
    Microsoft Employees Protest Treatment of Women to CEO Nadella
    Author: Nitasha TikuNitasha Tiku

    Labor Law
    How GitHub Is Helping Overworked Chinese Programmers
    Author: Klint FinleyKlint Finley

    Climate Change
    This Montana County Wants to Crimp Bitcoin to Save the Earth
    Author: Gregory BarberGregory Barber

Get Our Newsletter
WIRED’s biggest stories delivered to your inbox.
submit
Follow Us On Youtube
Don't miss out on WIRED's latest videos.
Follow

    SubscribeAdvertiseSite MapPress CenterFAQAccessibility HelpCustomer CareContact UsSecuredropCouponsNewsletterWired StaffJobsRSS

CNMN Collection

© 2018 Condé Nast. All rights reserved.

Use of and/or registration on any portion of this site constitutes acceptance of our User Agreement (updated 5/25/18) and Privacy Policy and Cookie Statement (updated 5/25/18). Your California Privacy Rights. The material on this site may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, cached or otherwise used, except with the prior written permission of Condé Nast. Ad Choices.

No comments: