Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Apple
  4. Health & Fitness
  5. Mobile
  6. News

GlaxoSmithKline is first drug company to use Apple’s ResearchKit

Add as a preferred source on Google

What makes Apple’s ResearchKit more attractive than your typical research institution-funded study is the standardization of data collection, as well as the ability to have participants enroll on their own and participate in studies from the comfort of their homes, drastically minimizing costs across the board. Interestingly enough, however, GlaxoSmithKline is the first pharmaceutical company to conduct a study through ResearchKit, reports Bloomberg.

Over a three-month period, Glaxo aims to involve 300 participants in a rheumatoid arthritis study that aims to include participants’ physical and emotional symptoms, such as pain levels and mood. More standardized data, such as the utilization of the iPhone’s sensors in order to record motion through a guided wrist exercise, will also be included.

Recommended Videos

The hope for the arthritis study, according to Glaxo head of clinical innovation and digital platforms group Rob DiCicco, is to inform any future clinical trials the drugmaker might want to conduct. However, there are potential shortcomings with using ResearchKit to conduct studies, something DiCicco partially acknowledged when he said, “One thing we’ll learn is whether we made it compelling enough to make you want to interact with it every day.”

Indeed, there remains the possibility that participants will grow weary of constantly entering information into the app, as well as the possibility that the data itself will be skewed. More specifically, since the cheapest iPhone retails for $400, the participant pool might be skewed toward those with more money in their pockets.

Even so, much hinges on the success of Glaxo’s study. Not only is the company breaking new ground by becoming the first drug company to utilize ResearchKit, but the success of its study might allow for other pharmaceutical firms to conduct ResearchKit studies of their own. Furthermore, Glaxo’s entry diversifies the kind of institutions that have utilized ResearchKit up until now, which have included hospitals and universities.

Apple also has a stake in Glaxo’s app, given how the Cupertino, California-based company is seemingly committed to its health initiative. During its March “Loop You In” event, Apple announced CareKit, an open-source platform that compliments ResearchKit by giving patients the power to manage their medical conditions and care.

Williams Pelegrin
Williams is an avid New York Yankees fan, speaks Spanish, resides in Colorado, and has an affinity for Frosted Flakes. Send…
iPhone users can finally get live translation on their headphones through Google Translate
Google Translate goes hands-free on iOS
google-translate-live-translation-headphone-ios

Google is bringing one of its best AI-powered Google Translate features to iPhone users at last. Live Translate with headphones is now rolling out on iOS, months after its debut on Android in December.

The feature turns your headphones into a real-time translator to help you understand conversations as they happen without staring at your phone.

Read more
Motorola leak reveals the upcoming Razr 70 Ultra, and it doesn’t want to change one bit
Electronics, Mobile Phone, Phone

In typical Motorola fashion, the Razr series has leaked once again, and this time we’re getting our first proper look at the Razr 70 Ultra. The renders come courtesy of XpertPick, in collaboration with Steve Hemmerstoffer, also known as OnLeaks on X (formerly Twitter).

Is there anything fresh here?

Read more
Siri could soon support third-party AI tools in major iOS update
Apple lets Siri phone a friend (and it’s AI)
Siri

Apple is reportedly preparing one of the most significant changes to Siri in years, with plans to open its voice assistant to third-party AI services as part of the upcoming iOS 27 update. The move signals a major shift in Apple’s artificial intelligence strategy, transforming Siri from a closed assistant into a broader AI platform that can integrate with competing technologies.

A Shift Toward An Open AI Ecosystem

Read more