IBM and American Diabetes Association Want to Transform the Future of Diabetes
Big data is coming to the pockets of diabetes patients. · Fortune

Watson Health and the American Diabetes Association are teaming up to help create a new series of digital tools that will ultimately reimagine how diabetes is prevented, identified, and managed.

The two organizations announced a long-term collaboration Sunday that will take the wealth of data collected by the ADA and feed it into Watson -- IBM’s computer system capable of understanding and answering questions using natural human language. The goal is to spur development of various apps that will help researchers make new connections, individuals better manage their disease, and provide doctors more tools to diagnose and care for patients. The partnership was announced as part of the Association’s 76th Scientific Sessions in New Orleans.

“Our hope is to impact not just the doctors, the researchers, the patients and caregivers but also the entrepreneurs. The folks who are trying to really be creative with how to engage mobile apps in cognitive to help people living with diabetes,” said Kyu Rhee, chief health officer at IBM Watson Health.

The ADA has collected over 66 years of data, including clinical research as well as information related to self-management, support groups, wellness activities, and diabetes education. IBM and the ADA initially plan to create a cognitive diabetes databases for both clinicians and researchers. For doctors, it aims to help inform the best treatment path for each patient as well as help identify potential risk factors based on an individual’s specific background. For researchers, it could provide unique insights that help highlight hidden patterns or new therapeutic targets. The data will also be open to outside developers to create apps that can help patients directly.

“The ADA is never going to be the next hot apps developer, but we can help the people who are the cool innovative folks,” says Jane Chiang, senior vice president of medical technology at the ADA. “We want to provide quality content to the technology community, so they can use our resources to get the correct information out there.”

Diabetes affects 29.1 million Americans, or about 9.3% of the nation’s total population, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. That includes the nearly 28% of people with the disease who go undiagnosed. Meanwhile, another 86 million–more than one out of three adults–have pre-diabetes, almost a third of which will develop the full-blown disease within five years.

The total number of people affected is staggering, but its effects go further. Medical costs plus the sum of lost work and wages for those with diabetes totals $245 billion, according to the CDC. The disease also accounts for some of the highest prescription drug expenditures. It’s the costliest traditional therapy class for health insurers, including Medicare and Medicaid, and prescription benefit manager Express Scripts projects that spending on diabetes medication will increase 18% in 2016.