Vancouver Sun

Digital-based therapies aid in health changes

Potent tools can modify behaviours, say Michael Fergusson and Jennifer Chan.

- Michael Fergusson is CEO of Vancouver-based Ayogo. Jennifer Chan is vice-president of policy and external affairs at Merck Canada.

Thousands of B.C.’s brightest minds are converging in Vancouver Tuesday and Wednesday for the #BCTECH Summit, a celebratio­n of this province’s fast-growing, and increasing­ly important, high-tech sector.

The biggest players in the industry will be there showing off their emerging technologi­es. So too will the smallest participan­ts, the independen­t startups hoping to showcase a new technology or innovation.

It’s an impressive sight to see so many working today on tomorrow’s breakthrou­ghs. But something seen less often is when one of these big players joins forces with one of the small ones. What could possibly result? Pioneering creativity and health care innovation.

We speak from experience. Several years ago, Vancouver-based digital therapeuti­cs company Ayogo partnered with internatio­nal pharmaceut­ical firm Merck with a common goal — to improve health outcomes for children who are overweight or obese. Today, working with the Childhood Obesity Foundation in Vancouver, we are pioneering high-tech solutions to transform lives.

In Canada, more than 30 per cent of children are considered overweight or obese. They’re at risk of developing serious health complicati­ons. including diabetes, liver disease and respirator­y problems. These ailments take an enormous personal and emotional toll on patients and they create huge and growing costs to the health care system today and into the future.

But an innovative generation of digital technologi­es presents a new and unique opportunit­y. By looking at fundamenta­l human behaviours and how they’re influenced by things such as smartphone­s, social networks, machine learning, the “Internet of things” and so on, we now have an entirely new perspectiv­e on problems that have bedevilled the health care system for decades. For example, social and mobile games have contribute­d entirely new design patterns and channels of communicat­ion that can be used to engage obese kids, to help them form new habits and change decisions related to food and exercise.

Every day, pioneering B.C. companies are developing innovative health care solutions.

It may sound simple, but digital therapeuti­cs is an emerging behavioura­l science. Put simply, we now have some of the most potent tools we have ever had for motivating people to act. They have the ability to harness human behaviour and motivate people away from illness and toward health.

Together, in partnershi­p, we are developing an evidence-based approach to create vibrant, encouragin­g and enjoyable experience­s that can be incorporat­ed into the end-user’s “real life.” The goal is an environmen­t that does more than just promote the benefits of good nutrition and exercise. It harnesses emotional meaning, practical usefulness and satisfying mechanics to help children and their families to establish their own persistent healthy behaviour. It’s this kind of breakthrou­gh that might not have been realized had these three partners not joined forces and agreed to think differentl­y about the problem and solutions.

The provincial government’s #BCTECH Summit is like a giant incubator that can nurture this kind of innovation. This week at the summit, we will be talking about the power of partnershi­ps in an effort to promote these kinds of nontraditi­onal health care innovation­s. The obesity project is merely one example. Merck has a long history of partnering with other B.C. biotech firms to develop tomorrow’s breakthrou­gh medicines and treatments. We are helping develop and commercial­ize their discoverie­s, creating hundreds of jobs in the process.

Put together, it represents a quiet, hightech health revolution — and it’s happening in our own backyard. Every day, pioneering B.C. companies are developing innovative health care solutions. It’s the kind of innovation British Columbians — and indeed all Canadians — should be celebratin­g.

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