Student-created mobile health app receives $50,000 grant

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WSU

Mobile HealthLink, a finalist in Wichita State University’s 2015 Shocker New Venture competition, is continuing to progress toward commercialization of its remote health monitoring software, thanks in part to a $50,000 I-Corps Team grant awarded by the National Science Foundation.

Former WSU student Brandon Bartlett, along with biomedical engineering faculty Nils Hakansson and Gary Brooking and associate professor of management Chris Broberg, are using the grant to further develop and cover entrepreneurial training for the Mobile HealthLink prototype, created bya team of students for their biomedical engineering Capstone project.

The training includes commercialization instruction and the opportunity to conduct interviews with 100 potential clients. It was conducted by VentureWell, a nonprofit organization that works in collaboration with the NSF’s I-Corps initiative to assist teams such as Bartlett’s in bringing their ideas to the commercial landscape.

 

Mobile HealthLink is a remote health monitoring software that works in conjunction with smartwatches to enable physicians to monitor the health of their patients without requiring a doctor’s visit.

The software program allows users to communicate with their doctor from the comfort of their homes through a variety of questions entered by their physician and displayed on the watch interface.

This helps doctors assess whether patients need to make a follow-up appointment. In addition, the feature helps users avoid the time and costs of unnecessary doctor visits, which particularly benefits elderly and post-surgery patients.

Some of the I-Corps funds have been allocated to improving the versatility of the Mobile HealthLink module. The goal is to calibrate the software with multiple platforms, including smartphones and tablets.

There are also plans to develop a web app that allows doctors to record patients’ data over the phone. This will further facilitate health monitoring and preventive care for doctors.

A focal aspect of the Mobile HealthLink project is its purpose. For Bartlett and his team, principle transcends profit.

“It’s more about the need and less about the technology,” says Brooking.

The prime motivator for Bartlett and the team is to develop a product that best serves an underrepresented population.

“The elderly are underserved,” says Bartlett. “There’s this stigma that they do not know how to use technology.”

Alongside developing a product that assists the sick and elderly in receiving the proper medical treatment in a timely manner, Bartlett also hopes to transform Mobile HealthLink into a business.

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