Apple tablet reps spotted at LA hospital

4045509491_e88eccdbf7_oRepresentatives from Apple have visited executives for Los Angeles’ Cedars-Sinai Medical Center “three or four times” to talk about the Apple tablet’s potential for  medical professionals at Cedars-Sinai, according to entrepreneur Jason Wilk.

Wilk, the founder of a startup company backed by the Y-Combinator incubator group, wrote on his blog that “My Dad plays golf with Cedas-Sanai hospital execs, who say they have been getting frequent visits from Apple about a new device in the last 6 weeks.”

In a phone call, Wilk said the number of visits was “three or four” and that his second-hand information suggested Apple wasn’t yet trying to close a sale, but rather probing for possible uses for the new device, which is almost certainly the tablet computer Apple plans to debut on January 27th.

It would be oversimplification to interpret the visits as proof that Apple plans to focus on medical professionals, rather than home consumers, as the tablet’s primary market.

Instead, the question is: Can Apple succeed where PC makers have failed?

We’ve been told for years that medical professionals were the guaranteed-to-succeed market for tablets. Bill Gates raved about his in 2006. But tablets like the Dell Latitude XT2 XFR, pictured above, have stiffed again and again, in part because of their ungainly laptop-with-a-backwards-facing-display design.

motion-computing-c5Wilk notes that the $2,000 Motion Computing C5 is one of the few successful devices on the clinician market, thanks to its one-piece, easily-carried form and lab-smock-white casing. A new generation of slimmer, cheaper tablets — analysts estimate Apple’s will list for $1,000 — might finally make sense for doctors and nurses to carry instead of a clipboard.

[Photo: AllPosters.com]

Next Story:
Previous Story:




Photo of Paul Boutin

About the Author, Paul Boutin

Paul (paul@venturebeat.com) covers Apple & the iPhone, social networks & social media, digital music & video, and any crazy Internet story. Paul wrote and edited for Valleywag from 2006-2008, after several years with Wired magazine and Slate. He writes regularly for The New York Times' Personal Tech section and sometimes for Wired and The Wall Street Journal. He studied computer science at MIT in the early 1980s, and worked as a software developer and network administrator for 15 years before becoming a professional writer. Follow him on Twitter at @paulboutin, and follow VentureBeat on Twitter at @venturebeat.

  • Healthcare makes a lot of sense, I know I'd feel a little better at the hospital if my doc rolled up with an Apple Tablet instead of a clipboard. Anyways- I wrote a bit more about this and related tablet news and speculation on my blog here: http://tastyslate.com/2010/01/11/apple-tablet-as-a-tool-for-healthcare-providers/
  • naw
    Well hey, my friend's dog is walked by the daughter of one of the doctors at Cedars-Sinai, and he told me specifically that Apple has never approached them in any capacity.
  • freehealthcareforall
    Intel is leading the Mobile Clinical Assistance for years now. Device such as the C1 and H1 (Panasonic) were the results of years of research between Intel and the Healthcare clinics and hospital. Apple is not the first to invent this; there is no iHeathcare here.

    http://www.panasonic.com/business/toughbook/h1_demo/index.html
  • John
    Apple certainly knows how to design a good looking product, but I’m not convinced they know how to design a product that would work well in the medical environment. It’s not simply about making a tablet; it’s about making a tablet that can be repeatedly sanitized (so it needs to be sealed and probably doesn’t have a fan), likely dropped, with a screen that offers good daylight viewability, ergonomic to hold all day (no processor hot spots and maybe a handle or strap). I just don’t see Apple taking the market seriously enough to do all that. If they don’t, these devices won’t achieve any level of ROI – but they will look good doing it!
  • Yes, I wonder if you can expose the tablets to UV?
  • John-Peter
    What about HiPAA compliance? I would bet that the success (and possibly the higher price) of the Motion Computing C5 has less to do with aesthetics and more to do with the fact that it was designed for healthcare use.
  • Mike
    Years ago, I worked on software for automating some records making and keeping by hospital staff for non-back-lit Newtons. I couldn't see what I was doing! I wasn't comfortable with the work, so I gave up trying to work there. Weeks later, that package eventually evolved to a "popular" hand-held machine made by Fujitsu. The reason the Fujitsu was popular was it didn't require too many calisthenics to code for, had wireless communications, lasted reasonably long on the batteries, and wasn't incredibly heavy (tho it was heavy enough to really need the shoulder strap).

    There are numerous deployed solutions for these kinds of situations, in hospitals and offices, on Wall Street, in warehouses for inventory. Apple has decided on a particular mix of critical features that all previous tablets have lacked, and engineered until they were able to hit that target; these features include weight, charge duration, screen quality requirements that no other competing product will have. The Apple device is not designed to compete against ePaper screens, but it is designed to fulfill a niche where Apple can sell millions of units over time.

    To handle the hospital's needs, they may need just a full-service browser that is compatible with the hospital's server-based packages. If they're able to, or want to display x-rays, cat scans, and MRIs on the device, sure, go wild, but the screen isn't going to be very big. That's not the primary purpose for these devices, and I wouldn't hold deployment of the tablets back because the screens aren't big enough to handle large images.
  • Bollocks
    This article is complete Bollocks. They could be selling them an IPod! Just because an Apple Tablet is supposedly cheaper does that suddenly make it the right tool for the job? Or because someone's Dad plays golf with someone that know's someone does this mean it's true? Can Apple succeed where PC makers have failed? Not in Healthcare.
  • The Apple tablet, which is currently rumoured to be called the iState, is expected to offer iPhone capabilities in a device with a larger screen for use around the home very much like a digital magazine.
  • Apple is remaining tight lipped over the leak, some will no doubt question the source of the leak just hours before the tech industry meets in Las Vegas for the annual CES confernce.
  • I wrote about this possibility a few weeks ago.

    http://mcoder.wordpress.com/2009/12/29/islate-let-the-gold-rush-begin/

    The only issue is, most Hospital Management Software are closed systems. Integrating them with new devices would always be a big a challenge.
  • This could be yet another sign in the tablet direction
  • taylorlauder
    All of this hype for a 1 Grand Tablet. The question is, is it practical? and now look what we have here? A fa.ke iSlate spec-s roaming around. Anyway as for the real score. It seems we will be seeing the official apple tablet announcement on 27-28th, along with some beta testing iPhone OS 4.0 SDK good.ies. Scru.tinizing the fa.ke iSlate and more: http://bit.ly/islate-specs-hoax-and-official-details
  • pxlated
    I've heard (from employees) that a large midwest hospital system is switching over to the iPhone here shortly and I know several docs that currently carry around iPod-Touches loaded with med apps. So, it wouldn't surprise me that Apple fas them in their sights.
  • TedHoward
    When I had my wisdom teeth out 4 years ago, the oral surgeon had a nice Windows tablet that he loved. I've seen many happy doctors with Windows tablet PC's since then. The main reason they liked them is the integration with all the back office and LOB systems that they use. And they all use different LOB systems. That integration has not historically been Apple's strong suit. IOW, I think they have an uphill battle. OTOH, uphill battles are their strong suit.
blog comments powered by Disqus