Logo

    Moving Digital Health

    At MindSea, we believe that the best apps start with a great idea, and by launching this podcast, we are creating a platform to support the free exchange of ideas among leading experts in our field. This podcast is an extension of MindSea’s commitment to a collaborative process. We often hear that our clients feel that we’re all on one team—this is our opportunity to grow it. Backed by our firm belief in responsiveness and transparency, we are inviting industry players to join our team and share their expertise to move digital health forward, together. The Moving Digital Health series will focus on insights and trends in the digital healthcare industry. Join us as we invite industry authorities and thought leaders to share their stories, their successes and challenges, and their predictions for the future of digital healthcare.
    en24 Episodes

    People also ask

    What is the main theme of the podcast?
    Who are some of the popular guests the podcast?
    Were there any controversial topics discussed in the podcast?
    Were any current trending topics addressed in the podcast?
    What popular books were mentioned in the podcast?

    Episodes (24)

    Moving Digital Health: David Burns of Halterix

    Moving Digital Health: David Burns of Halterix

    Founder and chairman of the pioneering motion recognition company Halterix, Dr. David Burns holds a PhD in Biomedical Engineering and previously worked in the nuclear industry. 

    Working with patients in a clinical setting during his surgical training at the University of Toronto, David identified a barrier to recovery that he realized could be mitigated. The technology he developed supports patients through the critical at-home stage of their physical therapy; David founded Halterix to deliver this technology to the patients who can benefit from it. 

    https://youtu.be/RgmqRxw8F4w

    In this episode, David details the clinical observations that prompted him to create the technology from which Halterix was born, and outlines: 

    • The barriers to recovery Halterix is working to address
    • How Halterix products help physicians monitor and learn from patient progress
    • The particular challenges of getting a new idea off the ground in a healthcare context

    David also describes how he built the team at Halterix:

    • The benefits of working with an external team on certain items
    • Why he does not regret recruiting friends
    • How and why Halterix pivoted to a business-to-business model

    Contributes some thought leadership insights: 

    • The steps involved in taking a technology from the research phase through to implementation in a healthcare system
    • Regulatory challenges around AI involvement in decision-making
    • The importance of measuring patients according to their own baselines, rather than by a general benchmark

    And offers a look ahead: 

    • The next potential application for Halterix’s technology
    • Projects currently in the works
    • Several exciting ideas he’s come across in his research
    • Potential future applications of technology now in development

    Links 

    https://www.linkedin.com/in/david-burns-b81055aa/?originalSubdomain=ca

    https://halterix.com

    Moving Digital Health: Mahshid Yassaei of Tali.ai

    Moving Digital Health: Mahshid Yassaei of Tali.ai

    A computer scientist by trade, Mahshid’s experience as a security software developer informed her co-founding of two companies specializing in healthcare: Evenset in 2015 and Tali.ai in 2019. She holds a Master’s degree in computer science and has a background in cryptography and data security.

    With Tali.ai, Mahshid and her team have developed a customizable voice-enabled AI for point of care. This cutting-edge interface solves for major challenges facing physicians, freeing them to spend more time with their patients.

    In this episode we’ll discuss the healthcare industry need Tali was created to serve, learn how Mahshid and her co-founder combined their expertise and compiled their team, and hear about the Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC) challenge that led to the founding of Tali.ai. 

    We’ll also explore Tali’s unique capabilities, including: 

    • How unstructured content complicates prompt information retrieval, and how Tali approaches that challenge
    • How the COVID-19 pandemic served as a pilot opportunity for Tali
    • Why Tali provides two different interfaces for all physician users

     

    And unpack some key applications and challenges: 

    • Specific patient profiles that can benefit from Tali’s service
    • Issues inherent to working in cutting-edge technology
    • Potential use cases for technology like Tali’s

     

    Later, Mahshid offers some key thought leadership insights: 

    • How she believes we can get more women interested in tech careers
    • What her workdays look like as CEO compared to her prior work as a computer scientist
    • Effective learning processes while transitioning from a technical role to a business ownership role

     

     

    Lastly, Mahshid shares:

    • Her favorite sources for inspiration and learning in the health tech industry
    • What she and her team are focusing on over the next year
    • What she’s most excited about for the digital health space in the near future

     

    Links 

    https://www.linkedin.com/in/mahshidyassaei/?originalSubdomain=ca

    https://Tali.ai

    https://www.womenofinfluence.ca/2021/03/25/how-this-tech-entrepreneur-is-changing-the-healthcare-landscape/

     

    Quotes

    • “In healthcare, there's always a gap between people on the technology side and people that are deep into the healthcare system. Every side is somewhat intimidated by the other side's expertise.”
    • “Even if you can save an hour, or half an hour, of physician time, that’s of great value.”
    • “You see a lot of patients just Googling the question. And they're not always armed with the knowledge on how to how to validate if the resource is evidence-based or trustworthy or not.”
    • “Really understanding all these use cases and building a product that fits perfectly for what they're looking for, that is the main point of focus for us. Scaling and selling, distributing, and all that comes after that, when we have the perfect solution.”
    • “That's the benefit of being a practitioner growing to a business leader: you understand your business to the deepest level. That is a benefit not all business owners have.”
    • “I'm very excited about the shift to a healthcare system where patients have more agency. . . . all the virtual care solutions are basically there to deliver the care to where the patient is, not where the provider is, which is our current healthcare system. I think that leads to a healthier population overall. And for that reason, it is a very exciting revolution in the healthcare system...

     

    Moving Digital Health: Chris Cullmann of Rev Health

    Moving Digital Health: Chris Cullmann of Rev Health

    Over his more than 20 years as a digital strategist and 15 years in healthcare, Chris has developed a well-rounded perspective that unites marketing, technology, and the user experience. He particularly enjoys working at the intersection of technology and communication.

    At RevHealth, Chris brings his unique expertise to bear toward empowering clients to effectively reach and educate physicians and patients exploring therapy options.

    Chris outlines the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on data usage and nonpersonal communications, describes recent breakthroughs he’s observed in digital therapeutics, and shares what elements of his current RevHealth projects have him most excited. 

    Moving Digital Health: Chris Cullmann of RevHealth - MindSea: App Design & Dev Agency, focusing on HealthTech

    Key takeaways include specific use cases and examples: 

    • How a single API, with the right add-ons, can provide both non-invasive support for a patient and peace of mind for their caregivers—if the necessary data is accessible
    • How data from a wearable device like the Apple Watch can create a shared language and change the parameters of a patient-physician dialogue
    • Instances where data creates opportunity for intervention and helps solve for the problem of poor patient self-reporting

     

    Challenges around patient perceptions of data sharing: 

    • Ethical questions around the ownership of personal health data
    • Critical differences between individual data and group data
    • “Data philanthropy,” and how physicians can help encourage this modern benevolence among patients
    • Viable value propositions for which consumers might be motivated to trade their data

     

    The critical role of storytelling in patient communications:

    • Creating a narrative that meets the user in their journey
    • Mediums and techniques Chris sees working best for patient communications
    • How privacy restrictions have impacted marketers’ ability to reach patient populations

     

    Chris also shares some future-facing insights, such as: 

    • Usage possibilities and the vast potential value of high-volume data
    • Data integrity and ownership questions that must be resolved
    • Why he believes data inoperability will be the next major challenge for the U.S. healthcare market, and what he thinks might be necessary to address it

     

    Links 

    https://www.linkedin.com/in/cullmann/

    https://www.revhealth.com

     

    Quotes

    • “What's really interesting about the healthcare market is we have an audience, the prescriber, who's not our end user—the patient is the one we're addressing with therapies—but the decision maker, and one that in some cases rate limits what our actual end user, the patient, is seeing. Because they're making the recommendations against their professional experience and the craft and training.”
    • “There's still a lot of opportunity for us to intelligently listen, in a respectful way for privacy, to help lend a narrative that's going to have a more meaningful user experience, and one that's going to really help participate in putting the right materials in front of someone who's in a position to make a decision about either their own therapy or a therapy for their patients.
    • “We need to discuss culturally and figure out how comfortable we are and what are going to be the guidelines. I don't mean necessarily federal guidelines, although they are important, but what are the cultural agreements we're going to have about anonymized data, and, in particular, being able to help other people who exist inside of the same patient population that we do, and being able to provide something that is really giving back to the community in the true sense of the word.”
    • “If you're a patient suffering from a disease, that's content that is really not only valuable, but that you find personally compelling. And you’re going to be drawn to those people like you who are going through the same kind of experiences.”
    • “When we talk about people's perception of data and privacy, I think one of the stumbling blocks is people don't have context to their data . . . they don't know what they're exchanging because they don't know where they fit.”
    • “There's going to be a value adjustment against that data model. People are going to start to realize they're giving up a lot in exchange for a little. And there's either going to be a rise of privacy and paying for services, or there are going to be a lot more protection mechanics…put in place in order to allow people to have a clear delineation into what they're putting forth versus what they're getting in exchange for their data.”
    • “[Storytelling] has got to be specific to the product. And it's got to be specific to where the product is in the marketplace too. Not every brand’s a hero. Sometimes, being able to have information in front of the patient that's really matter-of-fact is everything that patient needs.”

    Moving Digital Health: Alexis Moses of FCB Health

    Moving Digital Health: Alexis Moses of FCB Health

    A self-described geek, Alexis is partial to technological applications designed to make life easier or provide healthier choices for the public—an appreciation which may have informed his transition from the nonprofit sector to the pharmaceutical market. 

    At FCB, Alexis leverages his expertise gleaned from 10 years working with emerging technologies to create deeply engaging user experiences that educate his clients’ patients. 

    The Moving Digital Health Podcast, Episode 1: Alexis Moses of FCB Health - (mindsea.com)

     Episode Highlights:   

    • Employ conversational design to create guided user experiences that feel natural
    • Meet diverse user needs by designing flexibility into conversational UI
    • Leverage WebGL in a digital health context

    The critical role interactivity plays in patient education, as well as:

    • The benefits of a collaborative templating process
    • The value of a close connection between engineering teams and patients
    • Why Alexis’ team begins prototypes as early as the brainstorming stage

    Industry insights responding to the current moment, including:

    • Common adoption barriers specific to healthcare organizations
    • Engineering effective experiences while remembering that pandemic measures are temporary
    • Why brands should contribute to society outside their primary product, and how to go about it (Alexis proposes a possible model)

    Looking ahead, Alexis offers his favorite resources for keeping up with emerging tech, and shares:

    • Several emerging technologies he expects to prove highly effective
    • His top picks from the 2021 Propelify Innovation Festival
    • How he finds joy in his work despite the more sobering aspects of the field

     

    Links 

    https://www.linkedin.com/in/alexis-moses-a1256321/

    https://www.fcbhealthny.com

     

    Quotes

    • “I think that’s what’s so beautiful about the technology: it’s just another avenue. It’s not made to replace a website; it’s not made to replace human agents, either. It’s just another option.”
    • “It’s about designing a flow that can really meet everyone’s needs in order for them to find the solutions that they were initially looking for.”
    • “The bigger the canvas, the bigger the picture, and I think WebGL is the natural extension of these web experiences.”
    • “An old technology might be obsolete in its functionality, but it’s not necessarily obsolete in its cultural relevance.”
    • “Don’t shy away from something that seems like it’s obsolete. The opportunity is there to evolve that.”
    • “To see that the health market is getting these new imaginative and innovative technologies and really exploring—it’s an exciting time.”
    • “In order for something to eventually come true, we have to play in that space.”
    Logo

    © 2024 Podcastworld. All rights reserved

    Stay up to date

    For any inquiries, please email us at hello@podcastworld.io