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Tags: googleGoogle What Condition Your Condition Is In![]() Google needs no introduction. It is the single most dominant force on the Internet and perhaps the most influential company in all of information technology. It has already accomplished something that has eluded Microsoft — entering the dictionary as a verb. In May, Google launched Google Health (GH) in the United States. It likely will be in beta mode for years but it is already of value to those who are using it. Currently that is limited to Americans. Google’s official position on widespread availability was stated by a spokesperson in this fashion: “Google Health is currently available in the English language and the U.S. only. We are always looking to extend our products and services to users worldwide, and we hope to continue to expand Google Health to other countries and languages in the future. In the case of Google Health, there are very different rules and regulations concerning privacy and the ways personal health data and electronic medical records are stored in countries outside of the U.S. This will not be a hasty process.” Google’s position notwithstanding, there doesn’t seem to be anything preventing non-Americans from taking a look at www.google.com/health. Google Health allows an individual to keep his or her health records online. This data can be input manually and/or imported from clinics, hospitals, pharmacies, or other places where health records are housed. That by itself would be tremendously valuable but GH does more than just store and display your health records. It can check your medications for dangerous and unintended interactions, send you alerts based on your profile, analyze your data for dangerous conditions and remind you to take your medications by sending messages to your cell phone. Google Health, like other Google applications, has an uncluttered interface. After logging in with the same user name and password you use for Gmail and other Google services, you have four choices: Add to this Google Health profile, Import medical records, Explore online health services, and Find a doctor. Let’s look at each of them one by one. You start building up your profile by entering basics such as age, sex and height. GH automatically calculates your BMI (body mass index), a simplistic measure of underweight/overweight. As you add to your profile, GH is able to do more interesting and valuable things with your data. Once you’ve completed the basics, you enter more detailed information in the following categories: conditions, medications, allergies, procedures, test results, and immunizations. Conditions: Medications: Allergies: Procedures: Test Results: Immunizations: Next: Not quite there yet Pages: 1 · 2 You must be logged in to comment. If you do not have an account, click here to register
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