Scientific Program

Conference Series Ltd invites all the participants across the globe to attend International Conference on e-Health and Healthcare Innovations Amsterdam | Netherlands.

Day 1 :

Keynote Forum

Paula Hodgson

The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong

Keynote: Personalized medication advice using mobile apps

Time : 10:30-11:15

Conference Series  eHealth 2019 International Conference Keynote Speaker Paula Hodgson photo
Biography:

HODGSON was one of the pioneers in promoting and supporting e-learning in Hong Kong. She has worked in higher education since 1997, serving in The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, University of Auckland, University of Hong Kong, City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong Baptist University, and now Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK). Her research areas include technology-enriched teaching and learning, assessment in higher education, and massive open online courses. Concurrently, she is the co-principal investigator of the following joint-university Teaching and Learning Projects 2016–19 funded by the University Grants Committee:
(1) ‘Coding, Design, and Global Involvement: Engaging Students in Multi-domain Active Learning through the Creation of Mobile Apps and an Apps Resource Centre (ARC)’; (2) ‘Augmenting Physical Learning Spaces with Location-based Services Using iBeacon Technology for Innovative Learning and Teaching’; and (3) ‘Enhancing Learning Outcomes for Students through a Data-driven Review of the 4-year Curriculum in UGC-funded Programs’. She has been invited to present in ASEAN University Network on quality assurance and universities. She has made over 150 publications.

Abstract:

Patients in community are given medication aft er they have been treated in hospitals or local clinics. Although a licensed pharmacist will explain type of drugs and dosage when issuing drug, patients may follow them closely or miss out if they have not paid attention to. More oft en, they may not have time to discuss about the side eff ects with the pharmacist. Th erefore, it would be very useful to have a mobile application on health record, drug information, pharmacist information and medical appointment with medication information and health conditions of individuals. Currently, this is a mobile application that is under development in Hong Kong to provide an additional e-health support for patients or users who can get
useful health information, drug information or make a web-conferencing appointment with a pharmacist through the platform in Hong Kong: http://www.ampoule.org.hk/. It will take six to eight months to design and develop the mobile application. A pilot test will be conducted in Spring 2019. It is hoped that the application can off er an ongoing medication advice when a patient or user of the system need diff erent types of treatment or medical service providers. Moreover, a special feature is to connect family members
with the patient such that members will receive short message service (SMS) about medical appointment of the patient. As Hong Kong face the challenge of aging population, the mobile application can serve a better connection between family members and the pharmacy community.

Keynote Forum

Karen Cusack

Health Complaints Commissioner Victoria, Australia

Keynote: Healthcare errors and patient redress: How can complaints and patient health informatics improve quality?

Time : 11:30-12:15

Conference Series  eHealth 2019 International Conference Keynote Speaker Karen Cusack photo
Biography:

Karen Cusack was appointed as Victoria’s Inaugural Health Complaints Commissioner in 2017 to oversee complaints resolution processes about health services as well as  for   conducting   investigations into providers who pose a risk to Victorians. Prior to heading up the HCC, she was corporate Counsel of The Royal Women’s Hospital and has over 20 years’ of experience as a Senior Lawyer. She holds a Master in Laws from Monash University. She has been on a number of boards and was appointed by an expert working group advising on legislative reforms from “Targeting Zero: review of hospital safety and quality assurance in Victoria”.

Abstract:

Healthcare errors do occur, and there needs to be a system for dealing with the error and complaints that may follow. Complaints are oft en viewed negatively, but positive outcomes can result from complaints; from small lessons learnt through to service wide improvements. Fair and responsive complaint frameworks are
an important part of quality clinical care. Believing this shapes how complaints are treated, by using eff ective systems and informatics to capture data not only enables individual matters to be dealt with, but provides trend data leading to quality improvement. Having a good system of dealing with complaints, and recognising them for the role complaints can play, will be assisted by complaint handling standards, applied consistently. Again, all the systems were aligned with the patient experience. Resolving complaints directly can: be the quickest and easiest way to resolve issues; create opportunities for health services to rebuild trust; improve quality and safety through feedback; prevent minor issues from escalating into major problems. Th e right attitudes within healthcare can go a long
way in creating a positive culture in which complaints are seen as an opportunity and not a threat. By having in place eff ective systems to capture complaints data and identify trends and adopting a genuine interest in receiving feedback, health services can create an environment that improves quality in healthcare.

 

Keynote Forum

Dean Rakic

NovaTec Consul􀆟ng, Stu􀆩gart, Germany

Keynote: Adopting interoperability – Blockchain solution for healthcare

Time : 12:15-13:15

Conference Series  eHealth 2019 International Conference Keynote Speaker Dean Rakic photo
Biography:

Dean Rakic's professional focus is on project management lead with respect to the entire project life cycle including project initiation and project handling. Besides, his additional personal strength is in
acting as a specialist in business liaison/stakeholder management. His overall previous experience is on top of Strategy and Innovation Development during all company development phases. More
than 15 years of detailed knowledge of IT and software architecture, project monitoring and project controlling with the identifi cation, analysis, measurement, and control of project risks as well as the
regular analysis of the impacts makes his personal stamp of more than 20 years’ of experience in IT/ Software Industry.

Abstract:

A big portion of data that are produced by various digital ecosystems has met a lack of interoperability (i14y) on the line between applications, data streams and competitiveness of healthcare services. Th e new technology approach in the distributed messaging and blockchain became a key component of many technology stacks and can derive real-time data streams as valuable and scalable enough to enable real-time analytics that leads to improved productivity. Ingesting data streams from various sources, patterns of data can extend health trend analysis to the higher level of prediction, accuracy and improve models that suff er from complex and long-running analyses. Some of the known issues that produce lack of interoperability: Lack of i14y between eHealth solutions; reduced communication among task analyst; source complexity on eHealth domains; possibility of interference; diff erence in architecture/platforms; confl icting standards; heterogeneous landscape of eHealth systems in EU; no unifi ed coding systems; lack of balance between the allocation of the costs and the benefi ts of semantic i14y. Th e purpose of this research was to determine a possible bridge solution or a technology platform that can place blockchain as interoperability gap solver. With its principle of non-centralized data collection, non-central database, but sharing and distributing data across networks with the possibility to add and at the same time avoiding data alteration, blockchain becomes a player in the eHealth and in digital healthcare. From the early buzz of the healthcare it has become lately a promising technology that is able to jump into healthcare interoperability story.

Keynote Forum

Sjaak Vink

CEO and Founder of TheSocialMedwork, Netherlands

Keynote: Accelerating global access to health innovatio

Time : 16:00 - 16:45

Conference Series  eHealth 2019 International Conference Keynote Speaker Sjaak Vink photo
Biography:

Sjaak is the founder and CEO of TheSocialMedwork. He is a social innovator aiming to create a more equal and fair healthcare system that will give everyone, everywhere the same choices. Also the founder and former CEO of myTomorrows, he has further involvement in patient advocate groups such as the Abigail Alliance in Washington DC and Chicago based Cures Within Reach. Later on Sjaak initiated the Global Manifesto for Entrepreneurial Social Impact Change. In 2011 it was signed in Amsterdam by 600 successful young entrepreneurs from all over the world as a commitment to building social impact into the DNA of their companies. Today he remains an active part of TheSocialMedwork, sharing the work fl oor with a team of dedicated colleagues.

Abstract:

What is the challenge? Healthcare access is a worldwide challenge. Every day, patients from all over the world are denied access to elsewhere approved health innovations for arbitrary reasons. It is concerning to know that the number of cancer deaths is growing globally year aft er year with 3 out of 5 people aff ected with the disease around the world. I have also been there myself. I experienced personal hardships of family members and acquaintances that passed away before ever accessing the medicines they needed. My dear friend Stephan who was also an ALS patient, passed away before accessing the latest elsewhere approved treatments that could have easily prolonged his life. His only wish was to have “More tomorrows”. Why Now? Th e creation of Th eSocialMedwork is a timely and critical one, with only 11 years separating us from the 2030 health targets of the United Nations. It is our responsibility and duty to eradicate this challenge as soon as possible. Our aim is to keep pushing for a change in the access to healthcare landscape every single day. We have now safely delivered over 5,500 latest innovative medicines to over 75 countries, years before the offi cial availability in these countries. How are we doing it? Under the Named Patient import basis, Th eSocialMedwork is safely and legally delivering medicines to all over the world. Th ese regulations allow every citizen and healthcare provider to legally import an elsewhere approved treatment into their country of residence. Our success could not be achieved without a highly qualifi ed and skilled multicultural team which includes doctors, pharmacists, medical industry experts, scientists, regulatory experts and lawyers. We focus on the latest innovative medicines in oncology, neurology and rare diseases. We work on behalf of the patient in cooperation with their treating doctor or on behalf of expert hospital pharmacies and professors at centers of excellence. We oversee the entire process of sourcing and delivering the medicine so that the patient, doctor or pharmacy does not have to. In every case, patients must possess a prescription from their treating doctor based in their country of residence. Treatment responsibility should always be with the treating doctor. Our online platform is catered to both patients and healthcare professionals. Th ey are able to browse through diff erent treatments and discover the latest trials and approval process. It is also a place of support and inspiration where they can read other patients’ experiences living with a particular illness. What happens next? Th eSocialMedwork’s end goal is global health access for everyone regardless of their fi nancial situation. Th is is why we are working towards crowd funding, blockchain transparency, pricing algorithms and conditional reimbursement pilots. In the future we aim to further work together with pharma companies, patient organisations and healthcare professionals to provide patients with the latest and most innovative treatments at their fi ngertips the second they become approved around the world.

  • e-Health | Digital Health Start-up Forum | E-Health Applications | Electronic Health Records | Telemedicine | Consumer Health Informatics | Health IT Systems | Virtual Healthcare | Health Data Security | Medical Devices |e–Prescription | Bioinformatics and Digital Health | Diabetes and digital health | Healthcare Innovations |Next-generation sequencing | Artifi cial intelligence | Virtual Reality

Session Introduction

Ersin AKPINAR

Cukurova University, Adana - Turkey

Title: Accelerating health care to Orthorexia Nervosa and Obsessivecompulsive Symptomatic high school students

Time : 14:00-14:30

Speaker
Biography:

Ersin AKPINAR has completed his specialty training in Family Medicine at Adana Numune Research and Training Hospital. He started working at Cukurova University's Medical Faculty Department of Family Medicine in January 2000 and was appointed as a Full Clinical Professor of Family Medicine in 2013. He studied at The Universite Libre de Bruxelles in Brussels between 2004-2005 and then at the University of Illinois at Chicago in 2005 for a period of two months fellowship in Clinical Decision making fellowship, following his study in Akademisches Lehrkrankenhaus der Universität Duisburg-Essen Sankt Clemens Hospitale Sterkrade in 2010 later he went Germany for the project of the research and residency education needs for improving the quality of gastrointestinal diseases care in family medicine and at last he completed his study at University of Michigan at United States in 2014 for a period of three months. The main areas of his interest are primary care of acute and chronic diseases, hypertension, cardiovascular risk analysis, sexuality, and sexual dysfunctions, medical education, learning models, the electronic patient record programs, social media, digital health and innovation. He still works on many university-funded research projects.

Abstract:

The term of ‘eating disorders’ (EDs) covers the variety of disorders that are characterized by the abnormal eating habits of the patient associated with emotional diffi culties. Orthorexia nervosa (ON) is mainly characterized by supreme obsession with eating healthy, that sometimes lead to the severe physical, psychological and social disorders. Many of the psychological and behavioral aspects of EDs are shared by people who are at risk of ON. A signifi cant correlation between ON and the psychopathological characteristics of other EDs, was observed based on the variables including drive for thinness, bulimia symptoms, body dissatisfaction, perfectionism, interoceptive awareness, asceticism and impulsiveness. Thus, highlighted the possible relation between the risk of suffering ON and the diagnosis of ED.

Oluwadamilola Oshodi

University of South Florida, USA

Title: The future of medicine is now: Nanotechnology

Time : 14:30-15:00

Speaker
Biography:

Oluwadamilola Oshodi is a student at the University of South Florida, persuing her Master’s in Pharmaceutical Nanotechnology. With a background in Biology and Communication Arts, she has made it her duty to make the complexities of science digestible to all people. She is not only a student but the creator of a podcast and an online community called The Plannter which focuses on helping millennials grow into the best version of themselves. She is also the owner and creator of Made for Nano, a platform that helps educate people on the importance of nanomedicine, create opportunities to network with other nanomedicine enthusiasts, and foster relationships to create greater collaborations within the field.

Abstract:

Many healthcare professionals are not aware of nanomedicine and how it can transform healthcare practices. Many are not given the opportunity to learn the basics of nanotechnology, specifi cally in nanomedicine and how it can apply to their practices, businesses, and health. The purpose of this presentation is to give an introduction of nanotechnology and a basic understanding of its various purposes in modern medicine. It will provide an understanding of the functionality and characteristics of nanoparticles and how these details can be manipulated to enhance nanoparticle functions in general therapeutic applications. This presentation will also examine current drugs on the market and future possibilities with nanomedicine. For instance, applications of nanoparticles towards regenerative medicine can improve tissue engineering and ease the effects of diseases like osteoarthritis. In addition, targeted drug delivery systems using nanomedicine can be a solution to current conventional drug delivery options. As healthcare professionals are introduced to new ideas and methods in nanomedicine, they can understand what’s possible for their practice and provide the best care possible to their patients. Many healthcare professionals are not aware of nanomedicine and its possibilities for the future of medicine. A basic understanding of nanotechnology on general therapeutic applications such as targeted drug delivery systems and regenerative medicine can transform current healthcare practices and provide professionals with tools to advance patient care.

Speaker
Biography:

Andrea Giovanni Migliavacca has 22-year of experience in ICT Field. As a Senior Consultant for international organizations (ONUDI, IADB), he has gained international experience. Since 2009, he served as Senior Consultant and Project Manager at Lombardia Informatica where he has also worked in several eHealth projects, leading the team in the SALUS project. Besides managing eHealth projects, he has also worked as Management Consultant in SMEs around Italy. He holds a degree in Business Administration (1988). He is the Founder and the CEO of Think4Future. Based on his experience in several eHealth projects, he has conceived and designed the LifeCharger system.

Abstract:

AMONTRACk, project co-funded by the Lombardy, saw the collaboration between Think4Future and the Casa di Cura del Policlinico to test LifeCharger, an app to support the chronic patient in the management of his/her therapies. Parkinson's disease is a chronic neurodegenerative disease with an evolutionary character that is characterized by the presence of bradykinesia, tremor, rigidity and other motor and non-motor symptoms. The onset of Parkinson's disease is usually asymmetric and has an excellent response to dopaminergic drug therapy. From the early stages of the disease, close monitoring of the patient's proper drug intake is necessary to avoid the occurrence of motor blocking or dyskinesias. Over time the therapy must be personalized continuously based on the characteristics of the patient, the stage of illness and the functional request of the same. This condition, among the chronic diseases, is particularly suitable for testing LifeCharger, as an instrument able to monitor not only the right therapy but also the presence of pathognomonic signs and symptoms of the disease and its development, supporting the clinician in his therapeutic choices with specifi c and useful reports. Thanks to this monitoring, also factors related to the autonomy of everyday life can be corrected where necessary, aiming for a better quality of life and optimization of the therapeutic response. For chronic Parkinson's patients, there is a close correlation between the correct intake of therapies and the occurrence of symptoms. Allowing the patient to record these events with precision, also with the support of the caregiver, the treating physicians can modulate more precisely the therapies or the possible temporal scan of the same.

Speaker
Biography:

Michael Hession is a full time Emergency Physician with Master’s degrees in Biomedical Engineering and Business Administration. He has an interest in Modelling of Performance Measures. He also has published an article on home telemonitoring in obstructive airways disease.

Abstract:

Objective: The objective of the present study is to evaluate potential gaming of the four-hour metric known as the National Emergency Access Target (NEAT) in Australia and Emergency Treatment Performance (ETP) in NSW. Methods: Descriptive statistical analysis was used to recalculate and compare the scores for NEAT and the NSW ETP metric with 32,148 presentations during 2016. The effect on the ETP score of a reclassifi cation of patients was assessed. A computer simulation using a discrete event model illustrated the effect of the use of ED short stay beds on the ETP scores. Results: Using the ETP timestamp of the intent to discharge a patient, called, ‘ready for departure’ instead of the time of physically leaving the department which is used in the NEAT defi nition, resulted in an apparent 6% performance improvement. A local interpretation of the NSW state defi nition of the ‘transferred’ patient resulted in the ETP for ‘admitted’ patients improving by 16%. The discrete event model demonstrated that without changing patient length of stay, ETP scores can be improved by or optimizing the time of the admit decision or increasing the number of ED short stay beds. Conclusions: The opportunity of NEAT may be squandered unless gaming of the defi nitions and use of ED short stay beds is addressed. We argue that the longstanding issue of ‘departure time’ should be defi ned as ‘physically leaving’ the department which is a real measure of ED resource use and that NSW and national recommendations should be adjusted. ACEM accreditation of EDs should include review of their application of NEAT defi nitions so that they truly refl ect patient fl ow processes. Biography