Health
New app to help cut diabetes risk
New York, May 6
Amidst the din of countless
mobile apps, here comes an app that would help you fight diabetes.
Developed by healthcare start-up Noom, the app will enable users to
track their exercise and eating habits to curb Type 2 diabetes risk that
continues to plague a huge population worldwide.
Noom Health
will be distributed to at-risk patients by CityMD Urgent Care, which
operates 40 clinics in the greater New York City area, the New York Post
reported.
"A lot of these patients are like walking time bombs.
They're walking around with pre-diabetes or diabetes and they don't even
know it," David Shih, CityMD's chief medical officer, was quoted as
saying by the Post.
It will organise a 16-week diabetes education
programme developed by the US Centres for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC). But instead of attending classes, users will track
their progress with their smartphones.
In addition to its
educational software, Noom provides users with health coaches who answer
questions and let them know when they could use some exercise -- and
when to lay off the ice cream.
As such, Noom's app is an
alternative to the CDC's traditional in-person classes, in which
attendees typically keep pen-and-paper journals for their diet and
exercise.
"It's one thing to know that you have to make lifestyle
changes to improve your health, it's another thing to actually do it,"
Noom CEO Saeju Jeong was quoted as saying.
"Having the guidance and motivation right in your pocket makes it easier than ever to follow through," he added.