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Hacking Health in Hamilton Ontario - Let's hear that pitch!

What compelled me to register for a weekend Health Hackathon? Anyway, I could soon be up to my ears in it. A pubmed search on Health Hack...

Sunday, August 11, 2013

eHealth and the sci-fi movie Elysium




The science fiction movie Elysium has some interesting ehealth and healthcare applications. For example, there is the Med pod 3000.
Looking at the timeline for Elysium we see the following milestones (as they relate to healthcare):



2024: Armadyne first company to develop AI that eclipses power of human brain.
2052: MedPod 1000 debuts.
2093: MedPod 2000 finds cure for cancer.
2154: MedPod 3000 cures last known human disease.

Friday, August 2, 2013

ehealthenabled.ca new blog on Word Press!

Hello

I have imported this blogger site into a new experimental IP address I have named ehealthenabled.ca but am using the site only for some software implementation experiments. I will continue to blog from there while I compare, Word Press, which is awfully good, to blogger.


Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Australian Physicians are eHealth Enabled

http://www.immi.gov.au/gateways/panel_doctors/ehealth/

Sounds like down under the national architecture for electronic medical records is working well. I like the simplicity of this web link above and the reasons for eHealth implementation:

Why use eHealth?

eHealth means:
  • no paper records
  • faster processing
  • less complaints from clients.



Thursday, June 6, 2013

Your smartphone will see you now - McLeans article on Tricorder

I have been looking for stories or updates on the Tricorder Xprize and have found a few updates here and there, but this one on the March issue of McLeans magazine just caught my attention. How could I, a member of the public, have missed it? I like the McLeans online version "View in Clean Reading Mode". Is that a hat tip to the smartphone too? Probably. Time to get one myself maybe. Anyway, no belly aching about that. And that reminds me about a conversation I had with a refugee from Ethiopia that other day. He is interested in starting "literacy" programs in Ethiopia/Eritrea. I asked him if it was true that everyone in Africa has a cellphone. He said yes it was true that everyone had a cellphone, but not bread. This article is one of those "must reads" for anyone who actually reads this blog.
http://www2.macleans.ca/2013/03/04/the-smartphone-will-see-you-now-2/
http://www2.macleans.ca/2013/03/04/the-smartphone-will-see-you-now-2/2/
http://www2.macleans.ca/2013/03/04/the-smartphone-will-see-you-now-2/3/

IEEE conference in Toronto: Theme - SmartWorld

If I find the pocket change for registration - I am there in a heartbeat. Two panelists or speakers  of interest to eHealth students are Dr. Ann Cavoukian, Privacy Commissioner of Ontario, and Dr. Alex Jadad, who is founder for the Centre for Globale eHealth Innovation lab at the University of Toronto. Having Ray Kuzweil, Steve Mann, Marvin Minsky, et al there is just "icing on the cake".

Website for IEEE ISTAS'13: http://veillance.me

Theme - "Smartworld"

Living in a Smart World - People as Sensors
ISTAS'13 presenters  and panellists will address the implications of living in smartworlds - smart grids, smart infrastructure, smart homes, smart cars, smart fridges, and with the advent of body-worn sensors like cameras, smart people.
The environment around us is becoming "smarter". Soon there will be a camera in nearly every streetlight enabling better occupancy sensing, while many appliances and everyday products such as automatic flush toilets, and faucets are starting to use more sophisticated camera-based computer-vision technologies.  Meanwhile, what happens when people increasingly wear these same sensors?  
A smart world where people wear sensors such as cameras, physiological sensors (e.g. monitoring temperature, physiological characteristics), location data loggers, tokens, and other wearable and embeddable systems presents many direct benefits, especially for personal applications. However, these same "Wearable Computing" technologies and applications have the potential to become mechanisms of control by smart infrastructure monitoring those individuals that wear these sensors.
There are great socio-ethical implications that will stem from these technologies and fresh regulatory and legislative approaches are required to deal with this new environment.
This event promises to be the beginning of outcomes related to:
  1. Consumer awareness
  2. Usability
  3. A defined industry cluster of new innovators
  4. Regulatory demands for a variety of jurisdictions
  5. User-centric engineering development ideas
  6. Augmented Reality design
  7. Creative computing
  8. Mobile learning applications
  9. Wearables as an assistive technology
"Smart people" interacting with smart infrastructure means that intelligence is driving decisions. In essence, technology becomes society.
Professor Mann University of Toronto will be speaking in the opening keynote panel with acclaimed Professor of MIT Media Arts and Sciences, Marvin Minsky who wrote the groundbreaking book The Society of Mind  and has helped define the field of Artificial Intelligence (AI) among his major contributions.
General Chair of ISTAS13 and formerly a member of the MIT Media Lab under the guidance of Nicholas Negroponte in the 1990s Mann is long considered to be the Father of Wearable Computing and AR in this young field.