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AACP Annual Meeting
2015-07-11 - 2015-07-15    
All Day
The AACP Annual Meeting is the largest gathering of academic pharmacy administrators, faculty and staff, and each year offers 70 or more educational programs that cut across [...]
Engage, Innovation in Patient Engagement
2015-07-14 - 2015-07-15    
All Day
MedCity ENGAGE is an executive-level event where the industry’s brightest minds and leading organizations discuss best-in-class approaches to advance patient engagement and healthcare delivery. ENGAGE is the [...]
mHealth + Telehealth World 2015
2015-07-20 - 2015-07-22    
All Day
The role of technology in health care is growing year after year. Join us at mHealth + Telehealth World 2015 to learn strategies to keep [...]
2015 OSEHRA Open Source Summit
2015-07-29 - 2015-07-31    
All Day
Join the Premier Open Source Health IT Summit! Looking to gain expertise in both public and private sector open source health IT?  Want to collaborate [...]
Events on 2015-07-11
AACP Annual Meeting
11 Jul 15
National Harbor, Maryland
Events on 2015-07-14
Events on 2015-07-20
Events on 2015-07-29
2015 OSEHRA Open Source Summit
29 Jul 15
Bethesda
Articles

Dec 8 : BlackBerry Introduces First Health-Care App With Soon-Shiong

blackberry

By Gerrit De Vynck

BlackBerry Ltd.’s investment in health-care technology has produced its first applications targeted at doctors and nurses who use its smartphones.

The Canadian phone maker’s networks and devices will run apps developed by Los Angeles-based NantHealth, a health-care company run by billionaire Patrick Soon-Shiong. BlackBerry invested in NantHealth last April.

Health care is a key target for BlackBerry, said Chief Executive Officer John Chen. The first part of the deal will connect physicians’ BlackBerrys with a NantHealth system that analyzes tumors and recommends treatment options. It will be available early next year, the companies said. More applications are planned, Chen and Soon-Shiong said in a joint phone interview.

“We do have many hospitals and clinical groups that use our devices,” Chen said. “But what we’re talking here is much larger-scale if we become successful.”

Chen, who has said he plans to double software revenue to $500 million by March 2016, declined to comment on what the health-care business could be worth. Since he took over the Waterloo, Ontario-based company a year ago, Chen has narrowed his focus to industries that demand high levels of security like banking, government and health care.

“From my perspective, it was very important that security be paramount,” said Soon-Shiong, who has built several health-care companies and owns part of the Los Angeles Lakers basketball team. “There could be no more secure organization than BlackBerry,” he said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Gerrit De Vynck in Toronto at gdevynck@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Sarah Rabil at srabil@bloomberg.net Andrew Pollack, Stephen West

 

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