Consumer
New hires, branding efforts and academic research partnerships are all on the table for the smart ring maker's future.
First announced by President Trump on Friday as a nationwide resource, the testing-referral service already seems to have reached its capacity among California's Santa Clara and San Mateo counties.
Also: Consumer survey suggests declining digital health engagement; Iran's COVID-19 app pulled from Play Store after malware accusations.
Both features have already been announced or implemented by some of the company's smartwatch competition.
CMS-regulated payers will begin supporting HL7 FHIR APIs next year, allowing third-party developers to include claims data and other patient health information in their apps.
Experts will work with social media giants to curb the spread of misleading and deceiving claims.
The company is also sponsoring a free video consultation for the first 400 people accessing the service.
Two million people in Rwanda signed up to use an earlier service launched by the company in 2016.