Episodios

  • Episode 39: Building Communities To Improve Patient Access & Outcomes w/ Jess Ackerman, VP at Responsum Health
    Jul 20 2023
    What you’ll get out of this episodeListen in as host Tim Fitzpatrick chats with Jess Ackerman, VP of Strategic Partnerships and Impact at Responsum Health, about her experiences across healthcare and technology, including her path from Speech Language Pathology to patient-facing roles at health tech startups. Today, Jess leads partnerships for Responsum Health, a mission-driven digital health tech company that has built empowered, informed communities of patients with chronic health conditions to drive better outcomes and to strategically align them with resources, clinical trials and best options for their health. Responsum Health knows how to build communities, and fast.In this episode you’ll discover:How Jess and her team have launched and grown communities in as little as 3 weeks alongside their sponsor partners.Patient communities the Responsum Health team has helped so far, including menopause, chronic kidney disease (CKD), long-COVID, glaucoma, COPD, and even rare diseases like pulmonary fibrosis and Sanfilippo syndrome.How Responsum reduces clinical burden and improves communication, because patients can go to their doctor with a baseline level of education. Because of this, providers can perform at the top of their license and spend more time on treatment information rather than the basics.How Responsum engages patients with resources and education to help prepare a baseline for those initial conversations with their care team, and how this leads to better outcomes like recruitment, adherence, engagement, and reduced hospitalizations.Why the greatest barrier and competition to Responsum’s mission is the status quo, and what it will take to help patients, providers, and communities thrive if we can change it.Final Frontier - 5 Questions in 50 SecondsTop Challenge: Adoption of digital health tools Top Opportunity: Meeting patients where they areTech Trend You’re Following: Using our voices as diagnostic toolsPower of vocal quality as a health tracker (e.g. Sonde Health)Top Media Recs: The Humans by Matt HaigMad Honey by Jodi PicoultAuthor Elizabeth StroutThe Scent Keeper by Erica BauermeisteHealthcare / Tech Leader(s) You’re Following: T-Minus 10 guests are at the top of my list! 🚀🎉 Quotables“ Our Medicare community is quick to jump on the mobile apps and platforms. Our parent's generation between ages 70 - 80 – My mom is on her phone constantly researching and doing this and that – so I think people are judging a little bit quickly that the older population is not going to adopt the technology. I think it’s a huge opportunity because everyone has a smartphone. “Recommended ResourcesResponsum HealthResponsum Chronic Kidney Disease CommunityListen to Jess on the Empowered Patient Podcast Responsum Health Announces Partnership with Society for Women’s Health Research to Develop Unique Knowledge Resource for Women Living with MenopauseJoin the Conversation Jess Ackerman on LinkedIn“ This is my mom TODAY...She is 2 years, 3 months since her Stage IV Lung Cancer diagnosis; an "incidental finding" with NO symptoms, non-smoker, EGFR+ mutation. She was on the golf course when she received the call with the dreaded "c-word" diagnosis. Her story is both unique and like so many others with a stage IV, no symptom dx. #lungcancerawarenessmonth There has been considerable progress in reducing the burden of #lungcancer through effective #earlydetection and #precisiononcology ... and we need more! More #patientvoice. More #patientadvocacy. More integrated solutions. More focus on #patientexperience. More #access to #clinicaltrials #decentralizedclinicaltrials. My mom is strong and vibrant, in a #clinicaltrial at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute ... but DFCI cannot do it alone- in need of an ongoing holistic, personalized, integrated approach through #medtech #digitalhealth solutions.... Let's keep the momentum... Jasper Health Circuit Clinical
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    31 m
  • #38: Using AI, Data, and Telepharmacy To Drive Medication Optimization with Jason Rose, CEO of AdhereHealth
    Jul 6 2023
    Episode 38: Using AI, Data, and Telepharmacy To Drive Medication Optimization with Jason Rose, CEO of AdhereHealthWhat you’ll get out of this episodeJoin host Tim Fitzpatrick as he chats with Jason Rose, CEO of AdhereHealth. In this voyage we learn more about AdhereHealth’s mission to deliver data-driven technology that improves medication optimization and quality measures to achieve value-based outcomes. We also hear how Jason’s 30 years of experience in this space shaped the company’s rebrand and transformation since he took over its helm in 2018. Today, AdhereHealth is the market leader using telepharmacy to overcome social determinants of health (SDOH) and improve the patient experience.Disclaimer: In this video Jason incorrectly states Dr. John Halamka left Beth Israel and is now at Johns Hopkins but he is actually at Mayo Clinic.In this episode you’ll discover:How AdhereHealth delivers purpose-built, innovative technology solutions to improve the quality of care, medication adherence , and cost outcomes.Why AdhereHealth is still the only national telepharmacy solution operating at scale in the United States today, touching more than 30 million people through its technologies and at-risk engagement services.How their unique combination of analytics, clinical workflow software, and proactive telepharmacy outreach addresses an estimated half a trillion dollars of unnecessary annual medical costs attributed to medication adherence issues.Why AdhereHealth developed the first-of-its-kind PRM (patient relationship management) software to further their understanding of patients’ Social Determinants of Health (SDoH).How Jason and his team think about things like risk and data architecture for their PRM platform by leveraging claims data (mile wide), medical history (mile deep), and pharmacy records (updated daily).Final Frontier - 5 Questions in 50 SecondsTop Challenge: Leveraging a combination of technology and clinician enablement that actually accelerates outcomes (hint - not an EHR)Top Opportunity: Medication adherenceTech Trend You’re Following: Public-Private PartnershipsTop Media Recs: Breaking the Habit of Being Yourself: How to Lose Your Mind and Create a New One by Dispenza, Joe. Modern Healthcare, Fierce Healthcare, Rama on Healthcare, WSJRockefeller, George LukasHealthcare / Tech Leader(s) You’re Following:Elon MuskDr. John Halamka, CIO at Mayo ClinicDr. David Brailer, First US Health IT Czar, Bush AdministrationSarah London, CEO of Centene CorporationDan Mendelson, CEO of Morgan HealthDavid Cordani, CEO of CignaGail Boudreaux, CEO of ElevanceQuotables“The pandemic was a…wasted opportunity to tackle [medication adherence] in a really big way. Who were those most hurt in the pandemic? It was not about the genetic code, it was about the zip code. It was the same patients before we still see today who are not getting their drugs for the chronic conditions.”“We’re using the data of yesterday to inform our decisions today, and artificial intelligence to drive our actions tomorrow.”Recommended ResourcesMedication Adherence Is a “Force Multiplier” for Medicare Advantage Profitability, Enrollment, Star Ratings (AJMC, 2023)The Quintuple Aim for Health Care Improvement: A New Imperative to Advance Health Equity - PubMed (nih.gov)Cost of Prescription Drug-Related Morbidity and Mortality - PubMed (nih.gov)Charting a New Path to At-Home Medication Adherence With Digital Pharmacy Support (AJMC, 2022)Join the Conversation Are you a healthcare innovator? Tell us what topics and people you’d like us to cover in future episodes:Jason Rose on LinkedInAdhereHealth on LinkedInAdhereHealth on Twitter““It’s a long-standing belief that star ratings are Darwinism in healthcare. If you don’t get the four stars, you’ve lost a percentage of your premium and lost funding to put into the product, and now because you’ve lost that, you’ve also lost membership enrollment,” says Rose. “And because you’ve lost the ability to compete with your peers, it’s going to take two years to come back with a higher star rating.” Great article Patient Safety & Quality Healthcare and Matt Phillion!#healthcare #sdoh #pharmacy #quality #starratings#medicationadherence” @Jason Rose on LinkedInAbout Your HostTim Fitzpatrick is the CEO of IKONA Health, a company using neurobiology and immersive technology to improve how patients learn about their care and treatment options. Tim co-founded IKONA based on his own patient experiences while serving in the US Navy and now in the VA health system. He has served as Principal Investigator on multiple federal research grants, has co-authored papers on learning science, VR, and mental health in the age of COVID-19, and has partnered with top healthcare investors and institutions including the National Science Foundation, Department of Defense, National Artificial Intelligence Institute, StartUp Health, On Deck, FundRx, MATTER and NVIDIA.
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    37 m
  • #37: Bridging The Gap Between Physical and Mental Health in Chronic Care with Dr. Hillary Lin, Co-Founder and CEO of Curio
    Jun 21 2023
    What you’ll get out of this episodeListen in as host Tim Fitzpatrick chats with Hillary Lin about Hillary’s journey from launching Curio at the start of the pandemic to navigating their latest pivot into cancer care. Hillary’s training and clinical experience led her to founding a holistic wellness startup that evolved into psychedelic-assisted therapy to where it is now as a comprehensive care delivery and navigation company. While Curio’s vision has not wavered, the team’s resilience and continued focus on patients has guided the evolution and expansion of their care infrastructure platform. In this episode you’ll discover:What led Curio to provide supportive care to patients who have recently been diagnosed with complex chronic illnesses like cancer.How Hillary and her team have adapted their ketamine-assisted therapy treatments in this new model, and the outcomes they’ve seen from PHQ-9 and GAD-7 in as little as one month for patients using the assisted therapy.Why Hillary is hopeful that generative AI will revolutionize patient education in healthcare and make managing diagnosis easier to navigate.Why New York City is the place to build your health tech startup – Spoiler Alert: a community of familiar faces and fearless friends!Final Frontier - 5 Questions in 50 SecondsTop Challenge: The recent company pivot. When Curio changed the company vision, Hillary worked on rebuilding the relationship with partners and gaining new patients. Also, becoming in-network providers with insuranceTop Opportunity: Building AI native care delivery.Tech Trend You’re Following: VR/AR - New Apple VR headsets.Top Media Recs: Outlive by Peter AttiaHealthcare / Tech Leader(s) You’re Following: Peter Attia Eric Topol Andrew YingQuotables“In the beginning, I was so burnt out and frustrated with healthcare that I very much wanted to start a wellness company. What I mean by that, is we were coaching people to explore their emotions. From the basics of even labeling emotions and understanding mindfulness around your emotions to regulating them and to much more sophisticated ways of interacting using emotional language and expression. We even used to host improv classes to help people explore.” @HillaryLin #joinCurio on Ep37 @T-Minus10 w/ @trfitzpatrick. Recommended ResourcesWe're redefining comprehensive care.We Are Overmedicated. How Can We Use Psychedelics To Heal Not Just Individuals, But Entire Systems? DEA, SAMHSA Extend COVID-19 Telemedicine Flexibilities for Prescribing Controlled Medications for Six Months While Considering Comments from the Public Join the ConversationHillary Lin on LinkedInHillary Lin on TwitterCurio on Medium“I am a physician and founder of a mental healthtech startup (Curio). So what are my thoughts on emotional chatbots? At the time of writing, I'm undecided because this realm is still developing as we speak. I think early versions of emotional support chatbots will not feel incredibly fulfilling or validating to most users. However, there is a world where people may be so socialized to AI entities that they will feel at home interacting with them. For now, I'm more interested in how AI can help us think and stay accountable to our own goals. More of a coach, perhaps, than a therapist. The New York Times published an article on Inflection AI's Pi companion, which seems to validate this feeling. "With a level of enthusiasm only a robot could muster before coffee, Pi pushed me to break down my to-do list to create a realistic plan. Like much of the bot’s advice, it was obvious and simple, the kind of thing you would read in a self-help article by a productivity guru. But it was tailored specifically to me — and it worked.I'm curious to hear from people who have tried interacting with the latest emotional chatbots - what did you think about your experience?” (LinkedIn)“ 🎉 Breaking News for Digital Health Companies 🌐💊 The DEA has decided to extend the current COVID-19 telemedicine flexibilities for the prescription of controlled medications while they continue to consider the 38,000 comments received on their proposed telemedicine rules. This decision reflects a recognition of the essential role that telemedicine plays in providing Americans with access to necessary medications, and it is a significant milestone for companies like Curio. Our services, which include care navigation, coaching, therapy, medication management, and ketamine-assisted therapy, will continue to be available for those struggling with mental health challenges. We await further details on the draft Temporary Rule and its implications for digital health. This extension will enable us to continue offering transformative ketamine treatments virtually to those who need it most, bridging the gap between patients and quality care. 🙌💡” (LinkedIn)About Your HostTim Fitzpatrick is the CEO of IKONA Health, a company using neurobiology and immersive technology to improve how ...
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  • #36: Tackling Health Inequities in Chronic Disease using AI/ML with Kanishka Rao, COO and Co-Founder of Carenostics
    Jun 9 2023
    What you’ll get out of this episodeListen in as host Tim Fitzpatrick chats with Kanishka Rao about the unexpected loss of his grandfather, who passed away from kidney disease, and how he was not aware he had kidney disease until his kidneys had already failed. Because of this, Kanishka and his father, Bharat, co-founded Carenostics with the goal of tackling the underdiagnosis, undertreatment, and health inequities of chronic disease. Carenostics’ vision is to transform healthcare into a data-driven paradigm where readily-available patient data is leveraged to make personalized patient recommendations for diagnostic and therapy decisions.In this episode you’ll discover:Carenostics serves both physicians and patients by streamlining the diagnosis process for patients with chronic diseases and ensuring the patient is receiving proper diagnosis and more personalized treatment.How Kanishka and Bharat think about existing barriers to Carenostics short- and long-term success, including (1) provider friction; (2) changing workflows; and (3) cost.Technical questions that arise from using AI in these diagnostic settings, including around temporal stability, which refers to the question of keeping a model you’ve trained updated as you add new patients and guidelines to the data set. Questions also arise around bias adjustment and the cost of being wrong while using tools like generative AI to take on more and more of your administrative and decision making tasks.Carenostics just received the Bio-IT World Innovative Practices Award in 2023 alongside their partners at Hackensack Meridian Health for their AI approach to identifying undiagnosed CKD and activating clinicians at the point of care. Past winners include Astrazeneca, Merck, Regeneron, and Duke University.Kanishka and his team strive to change the status quo by shifting the way practitioners diagnose and treat patients to a more data-driven model where readily-available patient data is leveraged to make personalized patient recommendations for diagnostic and therapy decisions. This could save millions of lives through early diagnosis and intervention, and appropriate long-term treatment and care.Final Frontier - 5 Questions in 50 SecondsTop Challenge: Talent / hiringTop Opportunity: Awareness / acceptance of AITech Trend You’re Following: Bias-adjusted AITop Media Recs: Shoe Dog, by Phil KnightHealthcare / Tech Leader(s) You’re Following: Aneesh ChopraQuotables“When I reflect back to that first conversation with my dad, one of the first questions I asked was ‘You built these models 2 decades ago – the first FDA-approved way of diagnosing lung cancer from CT scans, it’s one of Baret’s patents – you know why isn’t AI used every day at the point of care. AI is not a new thing.’ The biggest reason was provider friction, and all these different models of charging providers morbid amounts of money for these operating systems, diverting them to a different workflow, providing black box recommendations or, fundamentally even trying to change the way they deliver care.” @KanishkaRao #Carenostics on Ep26 @t-minus10 w/ @trfitzpatrick Recommended ResourcesCarenostics Debuts AI-Driven Tool to Diagnose Chronic Kidney Disease (Carenostics)Bio-IT World Names 2023 Innovative Practices Winners (Bio IT World)SBIR Phase I: Artificial intelligence platform for secure, collaborative learning across medical institutions (NSF Award Search)Is the Software Function Intended to Provide Clinical Decision Support? (FDA)Join the Conversation Kanishka Rao on LinkedInBharat Rao on LinkedInCarenostics on LinkedIn“Thrilled to have our partnership with Hackensack Meridian Health awarded the Bio-IT World Innovative Practices Award! Excited to have our work using AI for CKD recognized alongside other innovative recipients, including AbbVie, City of Hope, & Regeneron!Thank you to Bayer G4A for the nomination - and looking forward to presenting with Bharat Rao & Kash Patel at the conference on May 18th! “ @Kanisha Rao on LinkedIn About Your HostTim Fitzpatrick is the CEO of IKONA Health, a company using neurobiology and immersive technology to improve how patients learn about their care and treatment options. Tim co-founded IKONA based on his own patient experiences while serving in the US Navy and now in the VA health system. He has served as Principal Investigator on multiple federal research grants, has co-authored papers on learning science, VR, and mental health in the age of COVID-19, and has partnered with top healthcare investors and institutions including the National Science Foundation, Department of Defense, National Artificial Intelligence Institute, StartUp Health, On Deck, FundRx, MATTER and NVIDIA.
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    33 m
  • #35 - Lynn E. Fiellin, MD, Founder, Playbl, Inc.
    May 24 2023
    Episode 35: Harnessing The Power of Play For Adolescent Health with Dr. Lynn Fiellin, Founder of Playbl, Inc.What you’ll get out of this episodeListen in as host Tim Fitzpatrick chats with Dr. Lynn Fiellin about her path to founding Playbl, the Yale spin-out company harnessing the power of play to enable healthier and better lives for adolescents. We learn what tools, principles, and earned wisdom Dr. Fiellin and her teams have developed over the past 13 years building serious games. From 30-page playbooks to randomized controlled trial designs for hundreds of teens, this is a must-listen for anyone interested in the use of video games for health education and behavior change at scale. In this episode you’ll discover:How Lynn landed her first grant from NIH in 2009 to begin building her first gamesPlaybl has now created games for ages 10 - 20 years old between topics ranging from health promotion, vaping and smoking awareness, and mental health awareness, to preventing opioid misuse and addiction.The importance of scientific process and study design in the development of Dr. Fiellin’s games, with 12-18 months from initial design through piloting and evaluation before its ready for randomized study.How an early partnership with Shell Games enabled Lynn and her team to combine best in class game development with academic research to get these games off the ground, and led to the creation of a “Games Playbook” to align gaming and research teams on a set of common goals, outcomes, and milestones.How Lynn and Playbl think about studying impact at various time points, and the durability of those results in the adolescent populationPlaySmart, Playbl’s latest game for kids ages 16 to 19, that was funded by NIH’s HEAL initiative and aims to address mental health and opioid misuse (see game).Playbl has long targeted K12 education settings due to the demand of parents and educators looking for these types of solutions, especially during the pandemic. Now, Playbl is exploring working with major children’s hospitals to provide health education content in clinical settings as kids are sitting in waiting rooms. Playbl has now recorded upwards of 420,000 logins for their educational games.Final Frontier - 5 Questions in 50 SecondsTop Challenge: System-level support and standardization in health education, School fundingTop Opportunity: Serious games for skills development in adolescent health and well-beingTech Trend You’re Following: ChatGPT, AITop Media Recs: “What's The Point of Your 20s?” By Emma Goldberg (New York Times)Healthcare / Tech Leader(s) You’re Following: Dr. Vivek Murthy, US Surgeon GeneralQuotables“Finding Kids where they are, and where they wanna be is really the ticket.” @LFiellen #PlayBl on Ep 35 @T-Minus10 w/ @trfitzpatrick “We design our efficacy trials in the way that we would design any other efficacy trials. The only difference is that the delivery vehicle is a video game. So, our current study is enrolling 532 kids ages 16 - 19, at 10 schools around Connecticut. We will follow them for 12 months, and they are essentially assigned to play our Play Smart game, which again focuses on Mental Health and opioid misuse, or a set of control games. We then collect data from all of them and baseline them 6 weeks at the end of gameplay, and 3, 6, and 12 months. This allows us to really say that we have accomplished something and that we accomplished what we set out to accomplish.” @LFiellen #PlayBl on Ep 35 @T-Minus10 w/ @trfitzpatrick Recommended ResourcesPlayBlPlay2PREVENT Lab - YaleA Yale doctor is using a video game to fight the opioid crisis - WaPoSeriousGames@Google: PlayForward: Using Games to Improve Adolescent Health (YT)Protecting Youth Mental Health - US Surgeon GeneralJoin the Conversation Lynn Fiellen on LinkedInLynn Fiellen on Twitter“What an amazing celebration! Congratulations to the brilliant Bernice Pescosolido and the Indianapolis Colts for this ground-breaking work by launching The Irsay Institute to address stigma related to mental health. The play2PREVENT Lab at Yale is thrilled to be partnering w you and Bring Change to Mind (BC2M)!Yale University School of Medicine Yale School of Public Health Yale Child Study Center” @Lynn Fiellen on LinkedIn“ “We do not stop playing because we grow old, we grow old because we stop playing.”My honor to give my Professorial Medical Grand Rounds last week, sharing the past 20 years of my career: down the research road and the other roads I have had the opportunity to travel. Thank you to my teams and partners at the play2PREVENT Lab at Yale, Yale University School of Medicine, Yale University, Yale Department of Internal Medicine, Yale New Haven Hospital, and others.I am so proud of this career and the work we have done together.” @Lynn Fiellen on LinkedInAbout Your HostTim Fitzpatrick is the CEO of IKONA Health, a company using neurobiology and immersive technology to improve how patients learn...
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  • Episode 34: Improving Home Dialysis Devices, Access, and Outcomes, with Dr. Osman Khawar, CEO at Diality
    May 10 2023
    What you’ll get out of this episode:Listen in as host Tim Fitzpatrick chats with Dr. Osman Khawar about the impact and benefits of home dialysis, and the potential of building a hemodialysis machine versatile enough for any care setting. Dr. Khawar describes feeling frustrated by not being able to offer flexible dialysis prescriptions to his patients. In today’s health system, nephrologists are often dialysis-centric and trying to get dialysis to fit into the patient's life, versus the other way around. Osman and his team want to change that. Today, he's leading Diality, a medical device company that aims to develop a hemodialysis system that will enable physicians to prioritize patients while also helping their practice thrive and grow. Their mission is to develop solutions that improve lives impacted by kidney disease.In this episode you’ll discover:Why early career mentorship was vital in Osman’s understanding and championing of home dialysis for his patientsWhere Osman learned to address key barriers in awareness and education around home dialysis in his practiceWhy Osman believes CKD should be patient-centric to determine each patient's needs and evaluate all possible methods of treatmentWhile patient education is highly important, sometimes we need to go back to the basics and ensure nephrologists are educated and confident in teaching patients the ins and outs of home dialysisWhat it takes to build a medical device company, especially as a first-time founder with a background in clinical medicineFinal Frontier - 5 Questions in 50 SecondsTop Challenge: TimeTop Opportunity: Broadening the user base in dialysis and leveraging data to improve outcomesTech Trend You’re Following: Artificial IntelligenceTop Media Recs: Essentialism, Thinking Fast and SlowHealthcare / Tech Leader(s) You’re Following: Dr. Khawar’s mentors from medicine, technology and entrepreneurshipQuotables“As Diality thinks about education – of course, as a device company we think about it in 2 ways – how do we ensure patients and care providers are comfortable using the device, but also as we move up the funnel, how do we make both patients, payers, and physicians understand the flexibility that they have in the choice of dialysis: modality, choice of machinery, choice of dialysis prescription, all of these pieces and I think we need to continue to leverage technology to do that.”Recommended ResourcesWhat is Chronic Kidney Disease and how does dialysis work? (Scientific American)Pam Wapnick Presents Diality at LSI USA ‘23 (YouTube)Diality Names Pamela Wapnick as Chief Financial Officer: Wapnick brings decades of financial experience to the company as it prepares for commercialization of its smart, mobile hemodialysis platform (Link)Hemodialysis Technology Company Diality Joins Innovative Kidney Care Campaign, Seeks to Improve Choice for Kidney Patients (Link)Join the ConversationOsman Khawar on LinkedIn‘This weekend, Diality organized a kidney walk to raise proceeds for the National Kidney Foundation. It was a beautiful day in Laguna Niguel spent walking for a great cause to raise awareness and improve education for those impacted by kidney disease. #diality #kidneymonth #kidneydisease #patientsfirst” @Osman Khawar on LinkedIn“In medical startups, particularly in the early days, a CEO should be accustomed to wearing many hats and making many decisions daily. As your company matures, as Diality has, you must consider how to target your time and effort to the essential things in today's distraction-filled world.I recently read Greg McKeown's "Essentialism." This book teaches the systematic discipline of getting the right things done by asking what is essential and eliminating what is not to support more deliberate decision-making. Essentialism is more than a principle. It's a way of life and thinking that helps us operate at our highest point of contribution.Becoming a true essentialist won't happen overnight, but I'm excited to take an active approach to view life through the essentialist lens. In so doing, I will become more intentional.Have you read this book? If so, what do you think? Do you have a suggestion on what I should read next? Looking forward to your comments! #ceo #reading#productive #business #essentialism” @Osman Khawar on LinkedInAbout Your HostTim Fitzpatrick is the CEO of IKONA Health, a company using neurobiology and immersive technology to improve how patients learn about their care and treatment options. Tim co-founded IKONA based on his own patient experiences while serving in the US Navy and now in the VA health system. He has served as Principal Investigator on multiple federal research grants, has co-authored papers on learning science, VR, and mental health in the age of COVID-19, and has partnered with top healthcare investors and institutions including the National Science Foundation, Department of Defense, Na...
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  • #33: Preparing For The Worst: Using VR To Train EMTs with Carla Bond, Founder/CEO at UpSkill VR
    Apr 26 2023
    What you’ll get out of this episodeTim sat down with Carla Bond, Founder and CEO of UpSkill VR, to discuss the transformative role that virtual reality is playing in emergency training. Sudden Cardiac Arrest (SCA) kills 1 person every 2 minutes in the United States, and 70% of SCAs happen at home. But did you know your chance of survival increases 45% when CPR is administered promptly?! UpSkill VR uses VR to help students, EMTs, and communities prepare for emergency situations, rooted in Carla’s own personal experience. She shares her personal experience as an EMT, including a story where she arrived at a call and found an infant in need of help and the surprising realization that led Carla to founding the company. We dive into the details of her journey as an entrepreneur, her target market, ideal partners and end users, and what's next for UpSkill beyond CPR. Here are some of the key takeaways from the episode:In this episode you’ll discover:Why Carla and UpSkill VR are on a mission to improve the ways emergency training is delivered using virtual reality, and how they create more immersive and realistic scenarios for trainees to practice in a safe environment.Carla’s personal story as an EMT and how that experience shaped the UpSkill mission.We discuss the potential of VR to help bridge the gap in healthcare education and training and improve patient outcomes.Carla talks about the importance of partnerships in growing UpSkill VR and how they are working with different organizations to expand their reach.We also chat about Carla's experience as a Navy veteran, the challenges she faced transitioning to civilian life, and the importance of having a support system within the veteran community.Finally, we explore the exciting developments on the horizon for UpSkill VR beyond CPR training, including the potential to expand into other areas such as public health and safety.Final Frontier - 5 Questions in 50 SecondsTop Challenges: Exposure, VR hardware prices, content availabilityTop Opportunity: PersonalizationTech Trend You’re Following: Realism – game art and designTop Media Recs: The Transition, by Bunker Labs (Link→)"Stand for Something", by Brian Burkhar (Link→)Healthcare / Tech Leader(s) You’re Following: Ryan Ribeira, CEO at SimX (LinkedIn →)Tim Cook, CEO at AppleQuotables“When you think about a traditional CPR class, you’re in a controlled environment and you’re playing essentially with a doll, of course they are manikins, but it's a torso. So the first thing you’re not going to encounter out in the real world is a torso and a head that needs CPR, and there is nothing else going on. So me showing up to calls; to summarize, I showed up to a call that really was a catalyst for me, I showed up to a call where according to the mother who had been a nurse for 20 years; so that’s at least 10 CPR classes that she sat through, but when we got there, he was still wedged between the tub and the toilet. It was not that she did not have the education to do it, she did not have that emotional tie to be able to take what she used in the class room and bring it to real life, and that’s where VR came in. ““Our perfect candidate is people who are professionals in the healthcare space, who are typically 1. Required to have it, since they are doing it anyway, and 2. Students who are going into the healthcare field, whether they are in highschool or college. We want to be there before you hit the clinic or hospital, so by the time that you get your first job, you’ve had endless amounts of practice on the most realialistic scenarios possible so we don’t have doctors passing out at the first sign of arterial blood or EMTs having those difficult calls. We can out them in there ahead of time and expirence it. This weeds out a lot of darkness, because you don’t really know how you’re going to respond, but if I out you in VR, I can pretty much tell you how you are going to respond. With our experiences, we track your heart rate, so I can tell you when you got scared, and I can tell you when you got out of breath. It’s like flight simulation, we want you to screw it up with us, not with anyone else.”Recommended ResourcesNIST, Commerce Launch Emergency Response Training Center with Virtual Reality (NextGov)Emergency Medicine VR (Booz Allen)See What Richie’s Plank Game Looks Like (Playstation VR)Join the Conversation Are you a healthcare innovator? Tell us what topics and people you’d like us to cover in future episodes:Carla Bond on LinkedIn“Upskill VR is excited to be pitching this year at the annual DC Startup Week Early-Stage Pitch Competition next week on Friday, September 16th at Convene sponsored by Sands Capital!! DC Startup Week is the largest event in the DC area for entrepreneurs and startups! 🎉.” Carla Bond on LinkedIn“Meet the winners of DC Startup Week’s annual pitch competition! Ten finalists competed at DC Startup Week's closing event, split ...
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  • #32: Advancing The Practice of Medicine Through Play (with Dr. Eric Gantwerker, VP & Medical Director at Level Ex)
    Apr 12 2023
    What you’ll get out of this episodeListen in as host Tim Fitzpatrick chats with Eric Gantwerker about how Level Ex brings together the best minds across healthcare and interactive entertainment to accelerate the adoption of new skills and treatments in medicine. Eric shares how he and his team think about designing new games, entering new markets, and finding ways to make medical education available anytime, anywhere. Since joining the team nearly 8 years ago, Level Ex has seen more than 1 million users and partnered with 30 out of the top 40 life sciences and medical device companies, including Medtronic, Johnson & Johnson and Boston Scientific.In this episode you’ll discover:How we know games work, including the story of how a young boy was able to safely pull over his grandma’s car and wait for EMS from playing Mario Kart. Why games are such powerful mechanisms for knowledge and skill transfer. How Level Ex identifies intent to help their users put behaviors into practice.How Eric thinks about outcomes, and what goes into planning and design in order to generate evidence required to make Level Ex a renowned medical education toolWhat factors go into needs assessment, market analysis, and the sizing of new markets created by game-based opportunitiesThe top qualities of innovators and early stage teams when entering healthcare markets with novel technology, and why listening and asking questions is key to their successThe power of adaptable platforms and matching platforms to learning tasks and skills developmentFinal Frontier - 5 Questions in 50 SecondsTop Challenge: AwarenessTop Opportunity: PersonalizationTech Trend You’re Following: LLMs, AI, MLTop Media Recs: What Video Games Have to Teach Us About Learning and Literacy, By James Paul Gee (Link to PDF →)Healthcare / Tech Leader(s) You’re Following:Justin Barad, Osso VR (LinkedIn →)Danny Goel, Precision OS (LinkedIn →)Richard Vincent, FundamentalVR (LinkedIn →)Bertalan Mesko, MD (LinkedIn →)Rafael Grossman, MD (LinkedIn →)Quotables“We’ve relied on outside PI’s to run studies, and we have studies on a bunch of what we call our core games. You know AirwayX there was a study looking at inhibition times and confidence and skill. We looked at PulX and the interest in anatomy and pulmonary function and interest going into pulmonary interventional specialties. We just had a study come back about our dermatology game which is one of our first knowledge-based mechanics and it actually showed that practicing clinicians did better in clinical scenarios” @DrEricGant on #T-Minus 10 w/ @trfitzpatrick Recommended ResourcesBackTable Innovation PodcastAdvancing The Practice Of Medicine Through Play (LevelEx)Play LevelEx Games (LevelEx)Level Ex study shows the efficacy of game-based training for experienced dermatologists (Fierce Healthcare)59 practicing dermatologists participatedParticipants played five game modulesphysicians’ scores and practical knowledge increasedthree-quarters of participants preferred learning through medical video games over traditional continuing medical educationJoin the ConversationEric Gantwerker on LinkedInEric Gantwerker on TwitterLove that play has found it's rightful place per Sam Glassenberg's vision! - Eric Gantwerker on LinkedInAbout Your HostTim Fitzpatrick is the CEO of IKONA Health, a company using neurobiology and immersive technology to improve how patients learn about their care and treatment options. Tim co-founded IKONA based on his own patient experiences while serving in the US Navy and now in the VA health system. He has served as Principal Investigator on multiple federal research grants, has co-authored papers on learning science, VR, and mental health in the age of COVID-19, and has partnered with top healthcare investors and institutions including the National Science Foundation, Department of Defense, National Artificial Intelligence Institute, StartUp Health, On Deck, FundRx, MATTER and NVIDIA.T-Minus 10 is a part of the Slice of Healthcare podcast network.
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