Ottawa Citizen

Startup serving seniors secures $50,000 grant

- VITO PILIECI

An Ottawa startup has been awarded $50,000 by the Ontario Brain Institute for its new suite of products that aim to help elder care facilities become more social.

According to Elizabeth AudetteBou­rdeau, chief executive officer of Ottawa’s Welbi, more than 43 per cent of residents living in senior care centres suffer from social isolation. It’s an issue she witnessed when her grandfathe­r ended up in a care facility outside of Montreal years ago.

Audette-Bourdeau, who attended Cégep de l’Outaouais before going to the University of Ottawa, wanted to find a way to use technology to better analyze trends in an individual’s regular routine.

“We can tell them who has participat­ed or if there is changes to their habits. So, when ‘Bob’ is used to going to Bingo on Friday’s then stops showing up then we can help them identify that and help them to go check on him to make sure everything is fine,” said Audette-Bourdeau. “There’s been lots of research to underline how important socializat­ion is in retirement homes. We wanted to bring a solution that could personaliz­e the experience of each resident that would make them really want to get out of their room.”

Welbi, which is based out of Invest Ottawa’s Bayview Innovation Center and already employs nine people, works on a monthly subscripti­on basis with senior care facilities. It currently has two clients, but is in talks with dozens of others.

The service replaces old, paperbased systems for tracking residents and their daily interactio­ns and involvemen­t in activities. Audette-Bourdeau said, the problem with tracking these activities on paper is that paper has a tendency to pile up. A whack of paper sitting in a pile on a desk doesn’t really help officials to have a deeper understand­ing of their residents, she said.

“Someone would have to go through all that paper to establish that, over time, there was a problem,” said Audette-Bourdeau.

Welbi tracks involvemen­t on a historical basis. Meaning, if one activity is replaced with another, the service can tell administra­tors how the new activity is being received and who is partaking in it. If fans of an activity stop attending, Welbi alerts staff to that, allowing them to check on the resident.

As an added benefit, Welbi allows family members to check in on their loved ones while they are in a senior care facility to find out what they did during the day, what they ate and whether there were any notes left by staff, flagging incidents or issues requiring their attention.

The company’s approach to managing resident’s informatio­n has caught the attention of researcher­s, including the Ontario Brain Institute, a provincial­ly funded not for profit organizati­on. The institute has awarded Welbi with a $50,000 grant to allow the company to continue refining it’s offering and better market its products to senior living facilities across the country.

“Welbi will help retirement communitie­s reduce social isolation by providing a rich and personaliz­ed experience to their residents and families, addressing a key need in the long-term care sector,” said institute president Tom Mikkelsen.

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