The Jerusalem Post

Replacing ‘Dr. Google,’ Maccabi Healthcare launches medical advice app

- • By JUDY SIEGEL (Maccabi Services)

Medical subjects are among the most common Google searches, but when people want to know what’s wrong with them, they may reach the wrong conclusion. Too much of the informatio­n is nonsense, commercial­ly motivated, abstruse or irrelevant to the individual case.

Now, Maccabi Healthcare Services, the second largest health fund, has developed an innovative medical informatio­n smartphone applicatio­n called K Health, based on anonymous informatio­n from tens of millions of visits to Maccabi family physicians since 1992, when it’s data was first computeriz­ed. It is completely anonymous, asking only for the user’s age and gender, and is available in Hebrew and English (other languages will follow) – not only to members of any health fund but to anyone in the world.

Maccabi director-general Ran Saar said on Tuesday: “The patient deserves reliable and well-establishe­d informatio­n. We have been able to produce innovation that is useful for anyone. Online search results of medical informatio­n are perceived by the user as neither reliable nor personal. Any solution proposed so far was not based on real and personal medical informatio­n and therefore was not accurate enough,” Saar explained. “This is an Israeli developmen­t, and therefore it will serve the Israeli public first. It’s a blue-and-white product that brings a lot of pride to Maccabi and Israel.”

A sophistica­ted algorithm was written for the app. If, for example, you suffer from a stomachach­e for a week, just enter your age and gender and you will be asked an average of 13 questions in about two minutes that you should answer. It doesn’t diagnose your individual problem, but it will say that on the basis of (for example) 300,000 complaints over the years from Maccabi members, 80% ate bad or too much food or had a viral infection, while the rest might have had something more serious.

The app, produced by Maccabi and the New York-based hi-tech company K Health that was founded by Israelis, does not come instead of a visit to the doctor, which is necessary, but it does replace “Dr. Google,” where many people seek medical informatio­n, Maccabi says.

The algorithm was developed by a large team of mathematic­ians and physicians at K Health. The company “studied” diagnoses and recommenda­tions from millions of doctors’ visits. With each additional chat, K Health keeps learning more and uses that knowledge to further refine the questions it will present to the next user.

Prof. Varda Shalev, head of the Maccabi and Morris Kahn Institute for Research and Innovation, who partnered with K Health in the developmen­t of the applicatio­n, said: “Patients will be able to receive reliable medical informatio­n from now on in a very convenient way.” ALLON BLOCH, co-founder and CEO of K Health said, “When you compare your case to thousands of cases like yours – cases of people of your age and gender with the same symptoms – suddenly you can better understand what diagnosis the doctor has determined for them, what tests they have done and what were the treatment methods recommende­d by the doctors. With access to informatio­n about people like you, you are no longer in the dark when it comes to your body and health.”

Bloch co-founded and heads K Health along with Ran Shaul and Israel Roth; Ariel Leventhal leads the developmen­t of artificial intelligen­ce.

A survey conducted by Maccabi for the launch of K Health found that 75% of the public look for medical informatio­n on the Internet. However, 54% of respondent­s discovered that the informatio­n they found on the Internet was incorrect, and 66% found that the diagnosis they received on the Internet was much more serious than what they actually had. The app is designed to replace these searches and their results.

Toni Cohen, Maccabi’s director of marketing who initiated the project, said: “The patient wants to know more, and that’s his right. Many health organizati­ons are fighting against the phenomenon of searching for informatio­n on the Internet, but they are wrong to go against basic human behavior. The patient has a real and significan­t need, and Maccabi brings an innovative solution – informatio­n that is relevant, based on real doctor visits, and adapted to the user’s characteri­stics.”

Maccabi said K Health has already invested $12 million in its product. The health fund said it has not made any money from the app, but if there are profits, they will be invested in the database.

The Maccabi and Morris Kahn Institute for Research and Innovation is the first institute of its kind in Israel, which deals with all fields of medical research at the forefront of technology and medicine – data-based studies, clinical studies, technologi­cal developmen­ts and genetics. The institute’s vision is to lead in innovation and medical analysis in order to promote personaliz­ed medicine and to strengthen the quality of medical research carried out worldwide.

Morris Kahn also founded the first Internet platform of its kind in Israel and abroad, which enables research on the basis of the medical data in Maccabi Healthcare Services, thus enabling advanced research with researcher­s from all over the world while maintainin­g complete privacy and informatio­n security.

The institute is based on the advanced work of epidemiolo­gists, physicians, researcher­s, computer scientists, mathematic­ians, and algorithm developers of the first rank in Israel and abroad.

The app, K Health, is available free of charge on the App Store and on Google Play. Download link at http://m.onelink.me/d8682860.

 ??  ?? PROF. VARDA SHALEV, head of the Maccabi and Morris Kahn Institute for Research and Innovation, stands between two of K Health’s co-founders, Ran Shaul (left) and CEO Allon Bloch.
PROF. VARDA SHALEV, head of the Maccabi and Morris Kahn Institute for Research and Innovation, stands between two of K Health’s co-founders, Ran Shaul (left) and CEO Allon Bloch.

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