Gov 2.0 Leadership » Alan W. Silberberg » Mobile medical app regulation or innovation stifling?
Mobile medical app regulation or innovation stifling?

I have been following closely the debate surrounding the FDA’s call to regulate apps like you use on your smart phone as a device, like a heart monitor or diabetes test kit.

Is this the right thing to do? I am all for regulation of industries to ensure safety and make sure no one dies because a product was used. But this is a whole new era. Is an app a device? Is it a life-saving tool or is it the new shiny toy on your smart phone about which you know nothing about the reliability or specificity of how it works? This debate has been roiling the device/app/regulated industry market for a long time already, but is really heating up this week due to pending legislation currently being “worked up” in the U.S. House of Representatives.

There are many legitimate questions at stake. Capitalism and how it relates to government regulated industries in a rapidly changing world for one. Health and safety of any “tool” whether device, software, hardware, application or just a bandaid; when it comes to being used on humans? Should the government stifle innovation efforts by regulating apps for your smart phone exactly as a medical device? Are small companies who are the primary developers of most apps still – being shut out of a marketplace controlled by only the largest and most set in place corporations and being assisted through legislative and regulatory ruling? What happens when one of these apps is used in a “cloak operation” and is actually something like a private information/financial information thief?

Wait, what did I just say? The harsh reality is the FDA even admits that the “device approval” is one of the hardest processes they put any company through, outside of actual drug approval. Just ask any device manufacturer about their recent run-ins with the PMA (premarket approval). You will get an earful.

But translate this to medical smart phone apps and the FDA. Who builds apps? As stated above, mostly small companies with small numbers of employees (obviously there are clear exceptions.) If the apps are to be regulated exactly as devices then it subjects these companies to lengthy, even multi-year engagements just to get approval prior to selling anything. This flips the market dynamics of most app companies; that are used to making their money off short development/lead time cycles, and short sales cycles. How can most small companies survive this? They can’t; and back to the question of a stifling of innovation in small businesses through the FDA on behalf of the few companies with the bucks to last out this process.

I would suggest the FDA look at how software and hardware is approved under FIPS for example. (FIPS are requirements issued by the National Institute of Standards and Technology that apply to federal government computer systems.) Additionally I would suggest the FDA create a tiered regulatory system, one for devices; one for aps. Clearly this debate is not going away without a fight.

Make it work.


12 Comments (Leave a Reply)

  1. Alan W Silberberg (May 24, 2012)

    RT @IdeaGov: Mobile medical app regulation or innovation stifling? http://t.co/71EkPiDf via @Ideagov

  2. CaracalDiagnosis (May 24, 2012)

    RT @nigelcameron RT @IdeaGov: Mobile medical app regulation or innovation stifling? http://t.co/rouFD7mr via @Ideagov

  3. Nigel Cameron (May 24, 2012)

    RT @IdeaGov: Mobile medical app regulation or innovation stifling? http://t.co/71EkPiDf via @Ideagov

  4. Alan W Silberberg (May 21, 2012)

    RT @IdeaGov: Mobile medical app regulation or innovation stifling? http://t.co/eB1xdnmx via @Ideagov #mobile #health #gov20 #egov

  5. Gestion Publica VE (May 21, 2012)

    RT @IdeaGov: Mobile medical app regulation or innovation stifling? http://t.co/eB1xdnmx via @Ideagov #mobile #health #gov20 #egov

  6. Jaime Gracia (May 21, 2012)

    Mobile medical app regulation or innovation stifling? | Gov 2.0 … #gov20 #ogov http://t.co/kto8bLgL

  7. Alan W Silberberg (May 20, 2012)

    Mobile medical app regulation or innovation stifling? http://t.co/8RRkOrdQ via @Ideagov #gov20 #ehealth #apps

  8. Alan W Silberberg (May 19, 2012)

    Mobile medical app regulation or innovation stifling? http://t.co/8RRkOrdQ via @Ideagov

  9. Alan W Silberberg (May 18, 2012)

    Interesting RT @ideagov: Mobile #medical app regulation or innovation stifling? http://t.co/JPomP21A via @IdeaGov #mobile

  10. Satoe kuwahara 桑原里恵 (May 18, 2012)

    Interesting RT @ideagov: Mobile #medical app regulation or innovation stifling? http://t.co/l8Depmab via @IdeaGov #mobile

  11. Satoe kuwahara (May 18, 2012)

    Interesting RT @ideagov: Mobile #medical app regulation or innovation stifling? http://t.co/JPomP21A via @IdeaGov #mobile

  12. Erin Kotecki Vest (May 18, 2012)

    Mobile medical app regulation or innovation stifling? http://t.co/8RRkOrdQ via @Ideagov



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