Health

Talking about the Health app in iOS 8 is difficult. Much like extensibility, what Health enables depends greatly on developer support that doesn't exist yet with iOS 8 being newly released. What can be explained right now is how it will work and what features it offers beyond being a simple aggregator of a user's health information.

At its core, Apple's Health app is a hub for keeping track of the health information from several different apps and devices. It will be able to sync data with health applications from other developers that use Apple's HealthKit framework. Many of these applications rely on data input by the user, but applications that integrate with fitness devices like the Nike FuelBand can also automatically send information that the device tracks to the Health application.

The Health app consists of four main screens. The dashboard is a user customizable section that displays cards with information about various health statistics. These cards display the information in a graph, with buttons at the top of the page to change the scale of the graph's horizontal axis.

The Health Data screen contains all the possible health information categories that the app keeps track of. You can search by a certain category such as body measurements, or you can view a list with all the various different types of information. Data points for a category can be added manually or sourced from applications that the user gives the Health app permission to access. Other applications for tracking health information can also request access to the information stored in Apple's Health app.

The Sources section contains a list of all applications that are allowed to access and update the information stored in the Health app. Once developers start to hook into the Health app using Apple's HealthKit framework, the Health app will become an area where a user can view all the information from various different health focused applications in a single place.

Medical ID

 

Medical ID is a new feature in iOS 8 where users can create a section that displays their personal and medical information. It's integrated into the Health app and it has sections for various information like Medical Conditions, Emergency Contacts, Blood Type, Allergies, Medications, and Organ Donor status. These are all things that would be of immense value to emergency workers when helping a person who is unable to give the information themselves. Medical ID can be made accessible via the emergency dialer so it can be viewed even on devices that have a passcode enabled.

I've personally been in situations where I was unable to give information like medications and allergies to emergency services about another person who needed immediate assistance. If you have any conditions that might be important, I encourage you to fill out the Medical ID and enable lockscreen access so paramedics or doctors can access it if they need to. It could save your life someday. What's unfortunate is that this is an Apple service for iOS, as it's something that could really be helpful if it was on every device. There's also some privacy concerns (e.g. anyone with access to your phone could view this information), but as always you have to decide which is more important.

The Health app is also an iPhone only application. I know of many elderly people who own iPads but do not own iPhones. I think Apple should bring the Health app over to iPad, or at the very least the Medical ID feature, as the elderly are a segment of the population that could benefit most from it.

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  • toluene - Thursday, September 18, 2014 - link

    Powerlevels here are very low. They're from "Puella Magi Madoka Magica" from glorious studio SHAFT.

    Homura did nothing wrong.
  • SeleniumGlow - Friday, September 19, 2014 - link

    True. Homura is innocent.

    But I'd kill to have those figurines... I want the kyuubi... They aren't available in my country at all.
  • jdrch - Thursday, September 18, 2014 - link

    "I do wish that Apple would add the ability to link accounts from XMPP messaging services like you can with Messages on OS X. Having Messages become a central hub for Facebook, Hangouts, iMessage, and SMS would clear a number of applications off my phone."

    Yikes, AT ... Hangouts dropped support for XMPP when it succeeded GTalk. Pretty bad miss there.
  • Brandon Chester - Thursday, September 18, 2014 - link

    Yes you're right. That should say Google Talk which is what can be added to Messages on OS X.
  • Brandon Chester - Thursday, September 18, 2014 - link

    Also it would be better worded to not specify as XMPP. I'll revise it as soon as I can.
  • Murazlols - Friday, September 19, 2014 - link

    I was about to install the new ios8 to my 4s. And i erased all my apps because the i only had 8gig. Then i heard the bad feedbacks about it. Now the problem is i cant download and install any apps i had before and i dont what the problem is :( does anyone here know how to fix it? I need help :(
  • mikato - Friday, September 19, 2014 - link

    Are they in your itunes still? You may have to connect your phone to whatever computer you have with itunes that you've synced to and check it out.
  • Wolfpup - Friday, September 19, 2014 - link

    Regarding upgrading the OS, there's no real choice unless you're only going to use the device as an ebook reader and for netflix, stuff like that that's not connecting to the Internet generally. No way is it safe to be using a device with an unsupported OS for things like browsing the web and email and the like.

    iOS 7 destroys podcast support on iOS (even though I had an iPhone 5s, I bought an iPod classic to use with it for podcasts, iOS is so bad at them now). But anyway performance on my iPad 2 was fine. Not as smooth as my 5s, but mostly just due to being massively RAM starved (which the 5s is too frankly).

    Between 4 out of the 4 Lightning connector devices I've owned having the port go bad (even my 5s after 10 months of carefully babying it), and Windows tablets now being available at similar (even cheaper!) price points than dumbed down iOS tablets, I'm done with the OS for tablets until 1) Apple ditches Lightning for USB, and 2) Apple puts real OS X on a tablet...what they should have done to begin with. (Granted, that was far less practical in 2010 than it is today, but today? For crying out loud Toshiba just launched a $120 tablet running real Windows with as much RAM and storage as the best iOS devices, complete with a good CPU/GPU by tablet standards. Screen is junk sounds, but it's freaking $120)
  • JoyTech - Friday, September 19, 2014 - link

    When are you guys publishing your iPhone 6 review?
  • Comments - Saturday, September 20, 2014 - link

    "Even under iOS 7.1, the UI smoothness on devices like the iPhone 4s and the iPad 2 is far from exceptional."
    I think Bradon is talking about a iPhone 4 here, because iOS 7.1 has always been very smooth on my iPhone 4s (iOS 8.0 is ok, but not fluent, hoping for improvement soon).

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