5 Incredible Healthcare App Ideas for Startups to Turn Pandemic into Opportunity
Feb 6, 2021, 10:13 pm
Ever since before the COVID-19 pandemic, the m-health app market was growing exponentially and the rise of this unforeseen situation will make the industry grow bigger than the sheer estimates.
As per the mHealth Times report; the global mobile health market is expected to witness an annual growth rate of around 33.5% by the year 2020.
The use of healthcare apps has not only improved patient engagement but, it has also made people more health-focused by sticking to a healthy diet and exercise recommended by fitness experts and doctors. It has revolutionized the way of giving medical aid in terms of prescriptions, consultations, and treatments.
Four Ways to Detox and Drop Weight After the Holidays [GALLERY]
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I m pretty sure that everyone and their mother decided to eat up some time this Christmas by pulling out the baking supplies and going nuts. Not that I m complaining, because I m not. It s just that my house is filled with piles and piles of baked goods that my family made (yes, we jumped on the baking bandwagon) and baked goods that friends and neighbors have dropped off. Like, mounds. And, I can t stop munching on them.
If you ve gained the COVID 20 and are now shoving your face with baked goods, you re probably going to walk into the new year wishing that you weren t as bloated and weighed a little less, but where to start? Glad you asked!
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SOUTH ORANGE, N.J., Dec. 16, 2020 /PRNewswire/ The new OBHealthy Weight Loss App promotes self-care for adults diagnosed with diabetes. It informs those who need to do better at preparing nutritional meals for breakfast, lunch, and dinner. Such self-care facilitates the diabetic struggle to minimize eating sweets, refined carbohydrates, starchy and fatty foods.
A blood sugar level test is an important self-care routine for a person with diabetes.
A beneficial aid, the App offers assistance to those with diabetes and underlying conditions like obesity and high blood pressure. Even though the conditions are preventable, people in the U.S. still possess additional risk factors. There also exist a disproportionate number of African Americans who have diabetes, and it leads to potential complications when untreated.