Showing posts with label Technology News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Technology News. Show all posts

Monday, March 14, 2016

This tech tricks your brain into hearing surround sound



Ambidio wants to give stereo sound a virtual makeover. The Los Angeles-based startup, which has secured investment from Horizons Ventures and will.i.am, has developed a proprietary encoding technology that it claims can turn stereo speakers into surround sound.

Laptops, mobile phones, tablets and even high-end hi-fi systems all work with the process. For best experience, the company says, use a laptop with speakers rather than headphones.

There’s been no shortage of stereo enhancement technologies over the years, but few have gained commercial traction. Complex recording requirements and encoding are the usual stumbling blocks.

But Ambidio looks to be different. It can be applied to any stereo source, embedded directly into movie and audio files, or used as a plug-in to process sound in real time. Adding heavyweight credibility is Skywalker Sound, which has signed up as a "strategic advisor."

Ambidio is the brainchild of Iris Wu, who as a student studying sound technology at New York University found herself increasingly frustrated at the inadequacies of laptop audio. And Michael Bay’s Transformers proved the final straw.

"There were buildings falling down, robots running around, but compared to all this visual impact, the sound from my laptop was so tinny," Wu tells WIRED. "I began to think about how I could get better sound from such a little device."

While similar to the Head Related Transfer Function trickery employed by binaural recordings, the technology is different, insists Wu. "Ambidio doesn't emulate any kind of HRTFs. We don't simulate virtual ears, virtual speakers, and we don't use HRTF shapes like EQ either. The theory behind Ambidio is a bit out-of-box - we try to let the brains pick up the sound source itself, just like we do everyday."

Ambidio claims it can make stereo sound seem three times ‘wider’ than existing virtual loudspeaker solutions. This is as much about neuroscience as it is conventional high-fidelity.

"We try to understand the whole process, how the brain interprets sound events. For example, we actually keep monitoring the environmental sound all the time, and have the ability to choose what we want to focus on, and what we don't. Knowing these really help us to fine tune Ambidio, not only make the effect more compelling, but also make it work for everyone."

"The beauty of Ambidio is that it can provide a theatrical experience to any device – from VR headsets to soundbars," says Wu. "There’s nothing like that in the market right now."

Source:http://www.wired.co.uk

Friday, March 11, 2016

Google Joins Effort to Stop Zika Virus Spread



Google last week announced it would contribute US$1 million to the UN Children's Fund to support the global fight against the mosquito-borne Zika virus.

A team of Google engineers has volunteered to work with UNICEF to analyze data in an effort to figure out the viral infection's path. It also will match employee donations with the goal of giving an extra $500,000 to UNICEF and the Pan American Health Organization.

The company took the actions following recent Zika virus outbreaks that caused a 3,000 percent increase in global search interest since November.

Last month, the World Health Organization declared a public health emergency. Coordinated Effort

The possible correlation with Zika, microcephaly and other birth defects is alarming, Google said. Four out of five people with the virus don't show any symptoms, and the primary transmitter, the Aedes mosquito, is widespread and challenging to eliminate.


UNICEF is working with Google engineers and data scientists to create an open source information platform to help UNICEF and partners on the ground target Zika response efforts, according to Chris Fabian, colead of UNICEF's innovation unit.

"This open source platform will be able to process information like mobility patterns and weather data to build risk maps. We plan to prototype this tool in the Zika response but expand it for use globally," he told TechNewsWorld.

Open Source Platform

The plan calls for Google software engineers John Li and Zora Tung, along with UNICEF research scientist Manuel Garcia Herranz and UX designer Tanya Bhandari, to work on the open source data platform. It will process data from different sources, such as weather and travel patterns, to visualize potential outbreaks.

Ultimately, the goal of the platform is to identify the risk of Zika transmission for different regions and help UNICEF, governments and nongovernmental organizations decide how and where to focus their time and resources. If successful, it can be applied to other outbreaks.

"Financial contributions and donations are always beneficial, but it is hard to say whether or not tracking the virus itself will have significant contributions," said Sarah Lisovich, content strategist at CIA Medical.

Putting Analytics to Work

The symptoms are similar to those of other common healthcare conditions, she told TechNewsWorld.

Google is a leader in terms of research tools and putting forth tools to help understand the outbreak and bring more awareness and comprehension, Lisovich added.

Analytics has been used to track mosquito-borne illnesses such as malaria, dengue fever and West Nile virus for years, according to Jamie Powers, health industry consultant at SAS Institute. In addition to understanding and learning from past events, analytics can quickly create new knowledge from billions of data points and multiple disparate data sets to provide the best input for predictive analytics.

"Text mining and social media analysis to track specific disease symptoms -- syndromic surveillance -- can also help detect the earliest stages of infectious-disease outbreaks, whether it is measles, H1N1, Ebola ... or Zika," he told TechNewsWorld. Respected Efforts

Google's contribution to the epidemiology of the Zika virus is a critical initial step for public health. It is significant not only for tracking the spread of the virus but for providing the public with information on it, said David Eling, director of business development at ProSci.

Empowering people with knowledge of where Zika is prevalent, how it is transmitted, and methods of minimizing risk is a critical job, he told TechNewsWorld.

"The more we know about the Zika virus, the more ways we will have to combat it," Eling said. "I have confidence that with this support and our growing knowledge that we will develop both a vaccine as well as a therapeutic against Zika."

Source: http://www.technewsworld.com

Wednesday, March 9, 2016

Obama Pushes Plan to Cut Medicare Drug Payments



WASHINGTON—The Obama administration is proposing a test program to see if lowering reimbursements for drugs administered by some Medicare doctors would prompt them to choose lower-cost, but equally effective, medications.

The development could lead to an overhaul of reimbursements under Medicare Part B, a program that pays about $19 billion a year to providers—and is outlined in a proposed rule issued Tuesday by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, which runs the program.

The initiative is part of a strategy by the Obama administration and Congressional lawmakers to tackle health-care spending that is driven in part by rising prescription-drug prices, an issue that has loomed in the presidential race and ranks high among public concerns in polls. The administration has sought information on pricing from pharmaceutical companies and has been probing ways to help consumers keep their drug costs in check.

But the proposal is meeting stiff opposition from the pharmaceutical industry and some providers—especially cancer centers where many high-price specialty drugs are used—because of the proposed drop in reimbursement.

“It is inappropriate for CMS to manipulate choice of treatment for cancer patients using heavy-handed reimbursement techniques,” said Dr. Allen Lichter, chief executive officer of the American Society of Clinical Oncology, a professional organization. “Physicians did not create the problem of drug pricing and its solution should not be on their backs.”

About 100 industry and consumer groups are already pressing the administration to withdraw the proposal because they say it would prevent some patients getting medications they need. They called the proposed rule “misguided and ill-considered” according to a letter sent to the Department of Health and Human Services last week in anticipation of the proposal.

“We urge you to ensure that our nation’s oldest and sickest patients continue to be able to access their most appropriate drugs and services,” according to the letter, which was signed by oncology, HIV and urology organizations.

The rule creating the test program could go into effect in two phases after a 60-day comment period, officials said. It would run for five years. Nothing in the proposal would prevent doctors from prescribing treatments they think patients need, officials said Tuesday.

“These models would test how to improve Medicare beneficiaries’ care by aligning incentives to reward value and the most successful patient outcomes,” said Dr. Patrick Conway, deputy administrator for innovation and quality and chief medical officer at CMS.

He said nothing would prevent doctors from administering any drug.

The insurance industry’s main trade group indicated support. “This pilot program is an important start towards ensuring that patients get the best value for their health-care dollars,” said Clare Krusing, a spokeswoman with America’s Health Insurance Plans.

Total drug spending in the U.S. is expected to hit $535 billion in 2018, which is almost 17% of all personal health-care spending, according to a report Tuesday by HHS.

Medicare Part B is a program that reimburses providers who administer prescription drugs in offices and hospital outpatient settings. It is a major component of Medicare, the $600 billion federal health-coverage program for roughly 50 million seniors age 65 and older and the disabled.

The Part B program has seen rising expenses due, in part, to the advent of newer and costlier prescriptions. Analysts have said the program is ripe for an overhaul because its reimbursement system provides an incentive for doctors to select more expensive drugs when cheaper and just as effective alternatives exist.

Generally, under Medicare Part B, doctors are reimbursed the average sale price of a drug plus an additional 6% premium. Critics have said this encourages the use of costlier drugs as doctors get larger reimbursements for using them.

A doctor who administers a $100 cancer drug, for example, would be reimbursed that average sales price plus $6.00. A doctor who administers a $1,000 cancer drug would be reimbursed the average sales price plus a $60 premium.

A November 2015 report by the U.S. Government Accountability Office said the current system has led to concerns that it is creating “incentives for use of higher prices drugs when lower priced alternatives are available.”

Under the proposed rule, the Obama administration would assign providers to groups based on their service areas. Doctors in certain groups would get the average sales price of the drug. They would also get a 2.5% premium instead of the current 6%. And they would get an additional fee of $16.80.

So doctors in the test ZIP codes who use a $100 drug would get the average sales price plus $19. A doctor who selects a more expensive drug at $1,000 would get about $42 plus $1,000. While the doctor who chooses the more expensive drug would still get a larger reimbursement, it would be significantly lower than the doctor would get under the current system. The goal is to reduce the incentive to provide costlier medications.

Phase two of the proposal—which would go into effect no earlier than January 2017—would alter other variables.

Some doctors under the current system and the proposed test would get a higher reimbursement rate if they select a drug that is very effective at treating a condition. They would get a lower rate if they select a drug that is less effective, officials said. Specific drugs involved would be selected based on clinical analysis with external input.

Another test in phase two would examine the impact that patients’ out-of-pocket costs have on the decision to administer drugs. Currently, about 20% of patients on Medicare Part B pay about 20% of the cost of their medications. Cost sharing would be eliminated for some in the test. The administration would examine if that has an effect on the type and cost of drugs doctors and patients chose.

Drug spending in the Medicare Part B program increased from $9.4 billion in 2005 to $18.5 billion in 2014, according to HHS.

Doctors give many drugs in an office setting, including vaccinations, cancer medications, nebulizer treatments, and drugs that are injected or infused, such as specialty medications for arthritis. The pilot test will likely face resistance from cancer doctors who have been concerned about tight margins and financial pressures from higher-price infused or injected drugs. Providers may also feel they are being pressured by the federal government into selecting cheaper drugs they don’t feel are as effective.

Source: http://www.msn.com

Saturday, March 5, 2016

Plane Toilet Can Kill Germs In Three Seconds



Boeing has developed an aeroplane bathroom that can automatically kill 99.9% of bacteria.

The moment someone exits the bathroom, ultraviolet (UV) lights sanitise all surfaces in just three seconds.

The toilet seat even automatically lifts so that the light can hit hard-to-reach areas.

Given that the flush button alone has more than 250 colony-forming units of bacteria per square inch, the development is likely to be welcomed by flyers.

Boeing director Jeanne Yu said: "We're trying to alleviate the anxiety we all face when using a restroom that gets a workout during a flight."

The UV light is not the A or B type used in tanning beds and growing lights, so it is safe for humans.

Engineer Jamie Childress said the system makes microbes "explode".

He said: "The UV light destroys all known microbes by literally making them explode.

"It matches the resonant frequency of the molecular bonds on the outside of the microbes."

The company has filed a patent for the self-cleaning bathroom, which also has hands-free taps and soap dispensers, hand dryers and rubbish bins.

Boeing is also looking to develop hands-free door locks, as they are also magnets for bacteria.

A vacuum-system is also being developed to suck up any waste water and spillages that end up on the floor.

The other priority is finding ways of making tray tables cleaner as they have a higher density of bacteria per square inch.

Meanwhile Airbus is developing its own bacteria-killing bathrooms in a different way - it wants to fit them out with surfaces which automatically kill germs.

Source: http://news.sky.com

Thursday, March 3, 2016

Verisante Technology Receives Purchase Order for Aura, a Revolutionary Medical Device for the Detection of Skin Cancer

Cancer detection technology specialist, Verisante Technology has confirmed that the company has won new purchase orders for Verisante Aura from the company's exclusive distributors in Canada and Europe.

According to the company, Aura is the only device that can detect all major types of skin cancer and the only device that has been developed by a government cancer agency and a leading university dermatology department.

Developed by a team of leading specialists, Aura is built to rapidly and safely aid in the detection of skin cancer when held above a suspicious mole or lesion. Even if a mole or lesion looks normal to the naked eye, an AuraScan will help your doctor identify it.

With the new purchase order sailing in, the company plans to ship Aura devices in February and the company officials said that they will update the new Aura website with a list of clinics where patients can go to request an AuraScan when installations have been completed.

"This is a significant achievement for our Company as we take this ground-breaking technology to full commercialization," said Thomas Braun, president & CEO of Verisante. "The Company has been working very closely with our distribution partners on a strategic product launch. With manufacturing of Aura™ now underway and the full support of our distributors, 2013 is already shaping up to be a very successful year for our company."

Aura is built to work like a non-invasive optical system that utilizes Raman spectroscopy to biochemically analyze the skin, providing immediate and accurate results. The device will help to automate the current process of diagnosis, allowing rapid scanning of the 20 to 40 skin lesions on at-risk individuals, improving patient outcomes and comfort.

“Aura has the potential to revolutionize the way skin cancer is diagnosed," said Dan Webb, CEO of Clarion, exclusive Canadian distributor. "Clarion is committed to bringing this life-saving technology to medical professionals across Canada."

Verisante is a medical device company committed to commercializing innovative systems for the early detection of cancer

Source: http://www.healthtechzone.com

Penn State Hershey Medical Center Selects Avantas Technology for Automated Labor Management System

Avantas recently announced that it’s consulting services and Smart Square proprietary labor management software has been selected by Penn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center. Using the company’s technology offerings, Penn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center will create an automated labor management system.

In a statement, Sherry Kwater, Chief Nursing Officer, Penn State Hershe, said that, "When we chose Avantas as a partner, our objective was to create increased efficiencies and cost savings across our entire enterprise. Before using this automated labor management technology we didn't have an effective way to post and fill staffing needs. Smart Square allows us to have a paperless, precise, and timely staff needs posting, creating enterprise transparency and consistency, allowing us to provide cost-effective quality care to our patients."

Implementation of the Avantas Smart Square modules was first carried out in the inpatient facility by Penn State Hershey. This helped in providing the hospital with a transparent view of staffing, scheduling, and productivity at the enterprise level. Furthermore, Penn State is also implementing Avantas' HELM (Healthcare Enterprise Labor Management) methodology. HELM essentially is a proven set of strategies based on the science of workforce planning, demand forecasting and operational best practices and combined with a complete set of scheduling and staffing tools.

Sherri Luchs, Chief Administrative Officer, Penn State Hershey Medical Group said that, "Our industry is facing unprecedented change and health care organizations will be continually challenged to get the most benefit from every dollar spent. Through our partnership with Avantas, we intend to gain greater flexibility and increased efficiency to achieve maximum value to effectively meet the staffing needs of each of our practices."

To benefit from detailed and extensive analysis of the entire health system's labor workforce and operational practices, Penn State Hershey Medical Group will also be leveraging the business intelligence tools and Smart Square dashboards from Avantas. These solutions will be implemented across more than 70 practice sites of the organization.

Source: http://www.healthtechzone.com

Wanda and Dignity Health Combine Efforts on Collaborative Platform for Cancer Treatment

Wanda and Dignity Health recently launched OncoVerse, a decision-support platform that facilitates collaboration in the treatment of cancer patients. Its designers seek to make the process of defining a course of treatment more efficient, and ensure that all members of the team involved in treatment are on the same page.

San Francisco-based Wanda, Inc. is a NetScientific Inc. portfolio company that develops remote monitoring healthcare analytics for the treatment of chronic diseases. In stating its mission, Wanda paints a grim picture of future plagued with rising healthcare costs. One statistic from the World Economic Forum in particular stands out: by 2030 overall healthcare costs will result in a cumulative output loss of $47 trillion by 2030 if no changes are made to chronic disease management.

Dignity Health is a San Francisco-based health system with more than 60,000 caregivers that operate in 21 different states. The non-profit emphasizes providing affordable care to low income and underserved patients and takes a holistic approach towards how it treats patients.

Wanda supports the concept of precision care as an effective method in reducing the cost of chronic disease. Each individual patient has their own unique combination of health issues to deal with, and one-size-fits-all treatments waste time and money trying to solve the problem.

A thorough knowledge of a patient’s history and all the pieces of information that define their unique condition make it easier to customize an effective course of treatment.

This approach gets a lot of pushback however, from patients concerned about privacy and the possible misuse of their medical information. The matter of what limits should be placed on patient information is one that will probably not be resolved by companies like Wanda, but instead be fought in courts for years to come.

In working with Dignity Health to create OncoVerse, Wanda has identified other unnecessary costs that can be reduced through technology. The last thing a stage 4 cancer patient needs is to endure a treatment team that is so disorganized, the left hand doesn’t know what the right hand is doing.

Modern customer care solutions address the left-hand/right hand problem effectively because they are designed in such a way that an agent can see all the pertinent facts about a customer’s support issue and pick up where other agents left off.

OncoVerse takes a similar approach in healthcare treatment. Care givers can see what has been done to treat a patient and follow up with the right course of action. It reduces duplicated effort and in some cases the wrong effort, during treatment, resulting in significant cost savings.

It will be interesting to see what other cost-saving opportunities Wanda can identify. Healthcare makes up one-sixth of the U.S. economy and will eventually take up a bigger share unless changes are made soon in the industry.

Source: http://www.healthtechzone.com

Thursday, February 18, 2016

Brain Cell Mutations Make Us All Unique



It seems there are trees in the brain, and they help make each of us unique. In fact, we are all basically mutants, and according to a new study by Michael Lodato and his colleagues at Harvard Medical School, mutated genes in brain cells proliferate throughout the brain’s development.

Genes directly or indirectly make the brain’s chemicals, as well as the locks that these chemical keys fit. They also help assemble the brain to begin with.

Small genetic differences help explain why each of us humans thinks, acts and feels like nobody else. Connections are forming and unforming when we memorize or forget a tune, fall in love or divorce, and write or read these paragraphs.

The brains of identical twins are a lot more similar than those of nonidentical ones, even aside from experience. Yet each identical twin also has a unique brain; in fact, twins’ brains are different halfway through pregnancy. Why?

One reason is experience. The twins had different positions in the womb and different supplies of hormones and nutrients. And when mom went to that loud rock concert—fetuses do react to and even remember sound—one of the twins may have had her ear closer to the abdominal wall. They have also competed with and influenced each other. The second reason is subtler: chaos. Not the kind in your teenager’s bedroom, the scientific kind—sensitivity to initial conditions—according to which a butterfly flapping its wings in Japan famously causes a storm weeks later in Mexico.

It’s the same in an embryo’s brain. Tiny differences in an early cell division—say, one cell gets slightly different contents—will amplify as cells divide again and again, form nerve cells and arrange themselves in circuits. Chance and chaos limit genetic control. Yet another way twin brains diverge: mutations after the egg and sperm unite. Every time a cell divides, errors occur; radiation and chemicals, even at very low levels, change DNA. And there are “jumping genes”—ones that duplicate themselves in different parts of the genome.

Dr. Lodato and his colleagues reported in Science last October that there are a lot more mutations than we thought. The researchers isolated hundreds of nerve cells from three donated postmortem brains, from unrelated adults.

New techniques make it possible to track the mutation history of a given cell line. Furthermore, most nerve cells stop dividing early—without which experience would not endure. Our brain cells carry their prenatal genetic signatures permanently, which means researchers can study those signatures. The scientists can map an individual nerve cell’s genetic code and see where it differs from its forebears in the brain. So the researchers were able to trace the mutated cells’ ancestry within each of the three people, a kind of family tree of cells inside each brain—as individual as a fingerprint, but far more important.

Since theoretically every cell in our brains (and bodies, except for eggs and sperm) should have identical genes, any differences must have resulted from mutation after the start of pregnancy. In fact, each cell on average had around 1,500 mutations. That’s a minimum. Only some of these affect nerve-cell structure and function, but they guarantee the uniqueness of each brain.

So identical twins begin with identical genes, but soon gain some changed ones. And so do we all, each minuscule mutant planting a family tree of cells within our brains, before we even meet our moms and dads. Upon which they—along with siblings, friends, teachers and lovers—proceed to make each of us even more singular.

Source: http://www.msn.com

Wednesday, February 17, 2016

Hospital paid 17K ransom to hackers of its computer network



LOS ANGELES (AP) — The chief executive of a Los Angeles hospital says it paid a ransom in bitcoins equivalent to about $17,000 to hackers who infiltrated and disabled its computer network.

Hollywood Presbyterian Medical Center CEO Allen Stefanek said in a statement Wednesday that paying the ransom of 40 bitcoins was "the quickest and most efficient way to restore our systems and administrative functions." He says the hospital did it in the interest of restoring normal operations.

Stefanek says the hospital first noticed the malware in its computer system on Feb. 5, and normal operations were restored on Monday, 10 days later.

He said patient care was not affected, and there's no evidence patient data was compromised.

FBI spokeswoman Laura Eimiller says the agency is investigating the extortion plot, often called "ransomware," but she couldn't immediately provide further details.

Source: http://www.msn.com

Sunday, January 24, 2016

IT Management for Healthcare

Information Technology
At Crown Enterprises, we deliver Flat-Rate IT Consulting, Management, Monitoring, and Maintenance services so that you can focus on your Patients, not your technology.

Our Flat-Rate IT Management Service is; HIPAA-HITECH compliant, directly or indirectly supports all Electronic Health Records (EHR) , Electronic Medical Records (EMR), Practice Management (PM) and Medical Billing software solutions, and reduces the cost and complexity of your technology.

Crown’s experienced staff members are your EHR, EMR, PM and Medical Billing support specialists. They focus on understanding your vital Patient and Billing processes and workflow to enable the most effective use of your technology resources.

Our services are HIPPA compliant from beginning to end. At Crown, our Support Desk Engineers and on-site Technicians are trained to remain compliant during system or software work. As your Business Associate (BA), we understand the importance of a HIPPAHITECH compliant audit trail. As a Medical Practice BA, our compliance framework is also the HIPAA-HITECH Act

Crown can be your Virtual IT Department. Like in-house IT Staff, Crown is responsible for ongoing system management including monitoring and maintenance, plus advisory and planning functions, but eliminates the expense of employee headcount.

Proactive IT Managed Services are as critical for IT systems as regular checkups are for the health of your patients. We regularly check your systems and update software. If equipment fails, Crown manages the vendor to get the equipment fixed or replaced. In case of a cataclysmic event, our Disaster Recovery process will get you up and running. Fast.

Technical expertise is required to; handle software updates and integration, avoid equipment breakdowns and manage network failures. The Crown team is certified in multiple technical disciplines. We have decades of experience.

Protecting your systems from internal and external threats is our highest priority. We have the experience and skill needed to put in place the solutions that will guard your data from malware and cyber-attack. New computer viruses come knocking like clockwork. Crown’s IT Service fights the cyber criminals for you.

Rely on Crown to be your Virtual CIO and IT Department. Our services include: Security, Proactive System Maintenance, 24-Hour Monitoring and Maintenance, Vendor Management, Technology Guidance, Support Help Desk, Disaster Recovery and IT Budget Forecasting to name a few.

Crown is a single-point-of-contact IT Management solution for all your IT concerns.

Our healthcare-specific services include:
  • HIPAA-compliant procedures and accountability
  • EHR, EMR and Practice Management Software consulting and support
  • Medical Billing Software consulting and support
  • Proactive desktop, server and network management
  • Branch office connectivity support
  • Lab Interface setup and configuration
  • Physician remote access
  • Mobile Device management and configuration
Some of the EMR/EHR's we support and implement are:
  • eClinicalWorks
  • NextGen
  • Greenway
  • gloStream
  • Medical Manager
  • McKesson (IKnowMed, Medisoft)
  • Practice Fusion
  • AMS
  • Ramsoft/Power Reader
Source: ce-technology.com

Sunday, December 6, 2015

MedicSMS Helps Diagnose Medical Emergencies Via SMS In Developing Countries

Information Technology
People in developing countries may not have the luxury of access to many modern technologies. They do, however, have affordable access to smartphones increasingly. According to a recent mobility report from Ericsson, there are 2.6 billion smartphone subscriptions globally, with another 3.5 billion expected to come online by 2020.

With that growth comes increasingly rapid SMS penetration, and with that penetration has come a slew of apps using SMS to support better health care. In the past, we’ve seen numerous SMS messages for disease prevention, surveillance, self-management and compliance in developing countries. (An academic study dating back to 2012 had identified 98 related applications.)

Many of those apps have focused on HIV/AIDS and used bulk messaging. Today, at Disrupt London’s overnight hackathon, a team comprising two astronomy PhDs from the University of Cambridge, along with three developers who they met here, came up with another seemingly useful app called MedicSMS.

The idea behind it is to allow someone without easy access to healthcare providers to text frightening symptoms that he or she is experiencing. Using IBM Watson, the app then delivers that person the best advice that it can regarding what the condition might be and what measures to take. Additionally, it asks the person sending the text for his or her location, data it then feeds to local government and NGOs. (The team also whipped up an interface that enables the NGOs to see on a map where the text was sent, so they can attend to the person if necessary.)
George Stefanis — one of the developers on the project (his full-time job is at the Walt Disney Company) — tells us that, already, “in principal, the app works if you were to call it from a browser.”

Next steps involve improving its infrastructure and figuring out how to overcome some restrictions of Twilio, whose SMS API MedicSMS is currently using.

Down the road, says Harley Katz, one of the PhDs on the team, MedicSMS could also help governments and health care organizations better understand when and where epidemics are taking root. “Eventually, we’re hoping to track much more, including where similar symptoms are popping up on the map.”

Source: http://techcrunch.com