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Vendors in Profile

11/8/2013

Higi ‘scores’ with kiosks


Through its biometric screening kiosks, its smartphone application and its website, Higi encourages users to take a more holistic approach to their health. True wellness, its creators insist, springs not just from such physical metrics as blood pressure, glucose readings and body mass index, but from lifestyle choices and connections to family, friends, neighbors and coworkers.


The company’s proprietary scoring system that “automatically compiles important personal health and wellness information into one manageable number, the higi Score, a compilation of your body, lifestyle and community,” according to Higi.


Higi’s chief technology officer, Khan Siddiqui, describes the company as a consumer health engagement platform that engages consumers through wellness kiosks, mobile and web.


“Higi breaks existing barriers and sparks conversation between the patient and pharmacists about their wellness,” added CEO Jeff Bennett.


“Higi stations” are currently available in hundreds of stores in 25 states, including CVS, Stop & Shop, Giant Food and Martin’s, ShopRite, Publix and Fred’s. In October, Higi added select Whole Foods stores in Northern California.


Mscripts expands mobile health


With Americans’ widespread embrace of smartphones and mobile technology, most patients now carry at least the potential for a direct, real-time link with their pharmacist in their pocket. A San Francisco-based technology company, mscripts, is working full-time to expand the possibilities of a mobile health platform that can serve as a comprehensive communications tool for boosting patients’ medication adherence, making the prescription refill process easier and accessing health information via text and video.


CEO Mark Cullen calls mscripts “the most comprehensive mobile pharmacy solution in the market today,” with widespread adoption by “national and regional retail chains, specialty pharmacies and hospital systems” that use its mobile connection with consumers to boost “patient engagement and medication adherence.”


Mscripts users, Cullen said, “can manage their health and prescription needs on their mobile phones, including the ability to refill prescriptions immediately, receive dosage and refill reminders, view video tutorials and respond to advanced adherence tactics.” The goal, he added: “a unified, omnichannel experience.”


Cullen said the mobile platform “is HIPAA compliant and has certified integrations to existing pharmacy systems including McKesson EnterpriseRx and PDX, enabling pharmacy retailers to integrate and launch in a matter of weeks.”


PillJogger uses games to make adherence ‘fun’


A mobile application-based software company has developed a new, fun-oriented tool to help pharmacies improve their patients’ medication adherence rates and boost their own non-prescription sales through mobile reminders, suggestive marketing and gaming technology.


The company, San Francisco-based PillJogger, applies innovative, interactive game-playing technology to its smartphone applications to remind patients when to take their meds, reward them for staying on their prescription regimens and encourage them to adopt healthier lifestyles.


“By engaging users with our underlying gamification architecture, we target improving persistency while driving vaccination and other revenue opportunities,” PillJogger founder and CEO Robert Pakter, M.D., said. Through the app, patients track adherence rates with a color-coded scoring bar that tracks medication use by dose and time.


“We’ve designed a total store solution ... to engage shoppers with medication reminders supplanted with healthy diet and wellness tips. Ongoing user participation increases the chances of winning prizes ranging from multivitamins to a Mercedes Benz,” Pakter said.


PillJogger derives its income from product suggestions incorporated within the interactive games, but those placements are linked to rewards, Pakter said. “Research has shown consumers don’t like or trust mobile ads. [We provide] vendors [a more effective conduit] to reach those consumers.”


SoloHealth extends reach in self-directed care


As the nation’s healthcare system shifts increasingly toward self-directed patient care, outcomes-driven cost efficiencies and disease prevention, health delivery companies that align with those powerful trends will likely flourish.


Such is the case with SoloHealth. It’s newest offering, the SoloHealth station, a patented, self-service kiosk, gives consumers in more than 3,300 retail pharmacy locations “free and convenient access to health care by allowing them to screen their vision, blood pressure, weight and body mass index ... in seven minutes or less for free,” according to SoloHealth.


The stations also give users access to a database of local physicians, “and actionable health recommendations,” the company said.


“Our mission is to create the most trusted consumer-directed healthcare platform using vital data to connect consumers with relevant services and products to improve their wellbeing and create better healthcare outcomes,” Stephen Kendig, EVP and chief customer officer, said.


Some high-profile retail partners — including Walmart, Sam’s Club, CVS, Publix and Schnuck’s Markets — are testing SoloHealth’s stations, and Walmart is reportedly rolling the kiosks into more than 2,500 stores. The company expects to expand to an estimated 5,000 locations in 2014.


SoloHealth also is growing its health services business, including recent partnerships with the Department of Health and Human Services, eHealth and WellPoint and its subsidiaries such as Blue Cross Blue Shield of Georgia.


VoicePort bridges the gap


Over the past decade, VoicePort has developed a suite of automated self-service communications solutions with an overriding goal: to forge stronger links between patients and pharmacies.


Based in Rochester, N.Y., VoicePort provides a “proactive ... communications platform to patients via voice, email, SMS and mobile notifications,” the company said. According to Adam Vargulick, director of product management, “VoicePort leverages its expertise in automated self-service applications combining technology, analytics and pharmacy operations expertise to deliver a full suite of personalized multi-channel patient communication and adherence applications called PharmaPhonetics.”


Vargulick said a prime focus for VoicePort in 2013 is a HIPAA-compliant automated patient-prompt and data-capture program called SynchroScript. The program “automates key elements of a medication synchronization process and provides a powerful analytical tool and dashboard to show PDC [proportion of days covered] compliance, as well as pharmacy and health plan enrollment statistics,” according to the company.


“SynchroScript roadmap also will include access to MTM, health tips and alerts within the pharmacy workflow as well as facilitate participation in Accountable Care Organizations,” Vargulis said.


VoicePort’s other solutions include:



  • PharmaRemind, which provides just-in-time notifications to patients on refills, pickup availability and other prescription issues;

  • An appointment scheduler application branded to the pharmacy; and

  • PharmaRemind Mobile, a mobile app that enables refill notifications and secure messaging.


PharmaSmart boosts its arsenal


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