A new online database from the Digital Medicine Society enables health systems, providers, patients and the general public to learn about which digital health products meet baseline privacy, security and equity standards, and make more informed decisions about which ones they use. Digital health developers can apply for the new Digital Medicine Society Seal online through a series of attestations and questions that cover industry standards such as SOC 2 Type II, HITRUST, Carin Code of Conduct, WCAG, ISO 27001 and more, according to the organization. WHY IT MATTERS There are more than 400,000 health software applications available to consumers and 30,000 for providers, health systems and other enterprise organizations, DiMe said in a statement last week.

"Digital health software products are driving transformational innovation in healthcare," DiMe CEO Jennifer Goldsack tells Healthcare IT News. "However, the burden of derisking software purchase decisions remains unacceptably and unsustainably high for end users." Gaining the DiMe Seal is meant to connote the software meets quality standards and is trustworthy.

Its standards were developed through a collaboration with more than 150 industry leaders who reviewed nearly 50 pieces of regulatory guidance, more than 100 industry standards and quality programs and 1,000+ scientific articles, according to the organization. DiMe said it also convened experts from across the digital health software ecosystem – including clinicians, d.