When Google Health first went live in 2008, the service held a lot of promise for people looking for a reliable and convenient way of centralizing their health records, and then matching them up with other resources like drug information and doctor databases. But when, in 2011, Google decided to shutter the service after it didn’t pick up enough traction, that left a lot of people with a challenge: abandon ship or look for a new place to fight the e-health fight. They had a bit of time to decide: Google said that it would only delete all remaining records on the service on January 1, 2013. Enter onpatient: a new public health record service from drchrono, a Y-Combinator alum with backing also from?Yuri Milner, Matt Cutts, Paul Buchheit, General Catalyst Partners, Charles River Ventures, 500 Startups and?Start Fund. Its initial goal is simple. It wants to be a replacement for Google Health: “Our goal is to allow everyone using Google Health?to import their data into onpatient,” co-founder Daniel Kivatinos wrote in an email earlier today. But while replicating what Google did with Google Health might be an impressive feat in itself, ultimately that might not do any better than Google Health did in the market. Kivatinos and his co-founder?Michael Nusimow have been honing drchrono for the last four years and now has 34,000 doctors listed. The pair had always wanted to integrate with Google Health when it was still a going concern, “but the service was missing some key features and we wanted to?integrate?once those features were there.” Those included a lack of customizable forms for different physicians, the ability to send picture messages to help decide whether a medical issue is serious enough to merit a trip into the doctors’ office. “Google Health was missing that real-time feedback.” Other problems were perhaps just a sign of the market not yet being ready. “It was somewhat hard for people to share their information from Google Health with their doctor,” said Kivatinos. “If a person is using an iPhone, they can use onpatient on their iPhone, have the doctor to scan a Passbook QR code, and the doctor will be given access to the medical record once verified.” Then, when the two heard Google Health was shutting down, “Michael and I decided it was time for our team to build the?replacement, rolling in features that we thought Google Health wasSource: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/LpoiH5LA2W4/
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