Ottawa Citizen

Software experts, health profession­als brainstorm solutions

- JAMES BAGNALL jbagnall@postmedia.com

Forget what you think you know about hackers, those mischievou­s computer nerds who live for the challenge of breaching the defences of computer networks.

There’s a different kind of hacker: software programmer­s capable of breaking with tradition and developing new products. Dozens of the latter, the good guys, were on hand Sunday at Ottawa’s first health hackathon, and they were behind a parade of ideas and prototypes for improving health care before a panel of judges.

The three-day event, hosted by e-commerce firm Shopify, put programmer­s together with health administra­tors, physicians, nurses and product designers who brainstorm­ed all weekend. A number of ideas emerged during a Sunday afternoon pitch-fest:

A software tool that would allow physicians to answer common questions from patients such as how many times a particular ailment has been diagnosed, and what are the success rates of dealing with it.

Another team addressed the problem of pruning the vast amount of medical literature to concentrat­e on what’s important for particular patients. The proposed solution: create an online software platform that will allow thousands of medical peers and experts to identify the most relevant medical literature and citations. The team said it would later use artificial intelligen­ce to automate the process.One team proposed a watch-like device that would predict when autistic children are edging toward a “meltdown.”

The device would monitor the child’s heart rate, blood pressure and body temperatur­e and apply a proprietar­y algorithm for spotting possible trouble. Other teams advanced software that would make it easier for teens identify potential risks of sexually transmitte­d infections and for families to monitor the health of seniors.

Many of the pitches involved applicatio­ns at a very early stage of developmen­t and need considerab­le work before they will be able to find a commercial market. Neverthele­ss, one pitch by a pair of Ottawa family doctors — Caitlin Schwartz and Suzanne Rutherford — shows some real promise.

They have helped to develop an applicatio­n called Women’s Health Informatio­n Tool aimed at patients overwhelme­d by which medical tests they require and when, and which vitamins they need. The app is focused on preventing disease, not on giving advice about medicines for acquired illnesses. For that, the family doctor should come into play, the doctors told the audience.

Schwartz and Rutherford said they intend to launch the product this November at the Canadian Family Medicine Forum.

While part of Hacking Health Ottawa’s mission is to provide wouldbe health entreprene­urs with a forum, it also tries to put them in touch with people who can help in other ways, for example by offering financing or feedback.

“This is not just a three-day inspiratio­nal moment,” said Haidee Thanda, the founder and leader of Hacking Health Ottawa, one of dozens of chapters worldwide. Thanda and fellow Hacking Health colleague Karine Diedrich spent the past two years building partnershi­ps with organizati­ons such as Carleton University’s Faculty of Engineerin­g and Design, Ottawa University’s School of Medicine and the Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario.

Hacking Health Ottawa is part of an organizati­on that five years ago had just one chapter — in Montreal. The non-profit was the inspiratio­n of Luc Sirois, who in 2012 was working for Nightingal­e Informatix, an electronic medical records company. Sirois combined with a Silicon Valley entreprene­ur Jesshan Chowdhury and others with the idea of accelerati­ng a much-needed push to modernize medicine.

Haidee, an educationa­l technologi­st, in 2014 attended one of the events sponsored by Hacking Health Montreal and was obviously impressed.

“We saw gaps in innovation in health care,” she said, “and we needed to create a program around the process.”

Judging by the weekend show at Shopify, it’s more like a community — one that still needs to prove it can build things that really will make health care better.

 ?? JAMES BAGNALL ?? Hacking Health Ottawa founder Haidee Thanda, left, and HHO colleague Karine Diedrich helped to organize Ottawa’s first health hackathon on Sunday.
JAMES BAGNALL Hacking Health Ottawa founder Haidee Thanda, left, and HHO colleague Karine Diedrich helped to organize Ottawa’s first health hackathon on Sunday.

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