Digital Health is on the Rise due to COVID-19 and is in the Spotlight at virtual.MEDICA

MEDICA 2020 16 - 19 November 2020, Düsseldorf, Germany.
MEDICA in Düsseldorf is a world-leading platform for the medical technology business and the healthcare industry and has always been one of the places to be for the entire sector as it covers current digital health trends, innovative products and services for linking all of the major stakeholders in medical care. Consequently, digital health is a mainstay of virtual.MEDICA, which, due to the pandemic, will be broadcasted online by MEDICA. It will be in fully digital format with many exhibitors and themed highlights and will be globally accessible.

It's evident that the corona pandemic has given the digitalisation of the healthcare sector a huge boost. It’s now easier for doctors to offer patients video appointments, and restriction regulations relating to case numbers and service provision have been lifted here. Providers of digital healthcare solutions reacted quickly by putting out a multitude of test offers for relevant software tools, many of which were free. Start-ups position themselves as a creative partner in developing digital solutions for the medical technology industry. Using remote health applications, big data analyses or artificial intelligence (AI) in the medical sector is considered to have high potential and all of these specialisms are under the spotlight in the virtual.MEDICA programme, for example in the English sessions in the Conference Area at the MEDICA CONNECTED HEALTHCARE FORUM and the MEDICA HEALTH IT FORUM.

The MEDICA CONNECTED HEALTHCARE FORUM kicks off with a bang on its launch day (16.11.) with the finale of the 12th Healthcare Innovation World Cup. The top 12 start-ups for the Internet of Medical Things will be presented here from 2 pm. PKvitality from France will be one of the participants. They have developed a watch that enables users to discreetly monitor their blood sugar levels. A trend indicator and graph displays help the wearer to improve their control of their blood sugar. The monitoring sensor for chronic illnesses from the German company Mindpax is another device that is worn on the wrist. This activity sensor is part of a lightweight, waterproof bracelet. The data are transmitted to the Mindpax.me app via bluetooth. The data are sent from the mobile application to a secure database for activity and sleep classification via internet. This personalised platform combines monitoring of biomedical data with self-reporting and supports people with severe mental illnesses such as bipolar disorder or schizophrenia.

The MEDICA CONNECTED HEALTHCARE FORUM offers another exciting pitch format with the 9th MEDICA Start-up COMPETITION (17.11. from 2 pm) and healthcare innovations in health apps, diagnostics, robotics and even AI from the start-up scene. Among the numerous remarkable COMPETITION applications, Mediquo from Spain deserves a special mention. They are presenting a professional tool for enhancing communication between doctors and patients. Another competitor, GenuSport, have gameified knee rehabilitation. These companies will be competing in the health app segment. In the diagnostics sector, Higo from Poland offers tools that can be used to examine children at home and then send the data to the doctor for a diagnosis. Artificial intelligence is being used by Evercot AI from Germany, among others, in order to capture brain changes, strokes, Alzheimer's disease, glioma and Parkinson’s disease remotely. H Robotics from Korea has developed a device in the robotics segment that can be used for wrist, elbow, ankle and knee exercises to assure rehabilitation at home.

COVID-19 - Redefining Connected Health

Prof. Dirk Brockmann of the Humboldt-Universität in Berlin will appear in the "COVID19 - Redefining Connected Health" section, held from 2 pm on Wednesday 18. November within the Conference Area at virtual.MEDICA. He initiated the Corona data sharing app from the Robert Koch Institute, which is also being discussed in the virtual sessions of the MEDICA MEDICINE + SPORTS CONFERENCE 2020. Once it has been voluntarily enabled, the data sharing app collects data from wearables such as fitness bracelets and is intended to help the Robert Koch Institute estimate the spread of infection. This has enabled scientists to better assess the current epidemiological situation and use it as an early warning system. In the same session on Wednesday, solutions for measuring temperature will be presented by Dr. Holger Hendrichs from greenTEG. Core body temperature is an important vital parameter in determining a person's state of health. greenTEG offers a unique core body temperature measuring sensor for continuous non-invasive measurement. It can, for example, be used for monitoring purposes when integrated into a wearable for people who need additional care or even, with regard to COVID-19, implemented as a type of early warning system for company employees.

Clinically validated wearables can be used to capture a wide variety of cardiorespiratory signals, such as respiratory volume and frequency, blood oxygen saturation, heart rate, lung sounds and core body temperature. These wearables can thus help doctors to care for patients remotely and form diagnoses, whether it be for sleep apnoea, pulmonary hypertension or severe acute respiratory syndrome. Dave Hughes of Novosound will give a lecture on a relevant solution which involves wearable ultrasound sensors that is used in pulmonary diagnoses and recovery management.

Digital applications for all

The excitement continues right through to the closing day (19.11) with start-ups and their innovations at the MEDICA CONNECTED HEALTHCARE FORUM. On this date, numerous developer teams will present their innovations under the MEDICA DISRUPT label. In one session (held from 3:40 pm), Laszlo Bax from Braingaze will explain how digital biomarkers enable early detection of cognitive impairments. The extent to which AI is capable of detecting brain disease early will be described by Roland Amba Assam of Evercot AI.

It's becoming clearer and clearer that digital health applications open up a wide variety of options in terms of prevention, diagnosis and therapy, and are not only advantageous for the treating doctor but also benefit to patients as hand-held digital helpers. The German Federal Institute for Drugs and Medical Devices (BfArM) is also backing digital healthcare applications. With the Digital Healthcare Act (DVG) and the Digital Health Applications Ordinance (DiGAV), the legislating body has laid the foundations for making apps available to the 73 million members of the statutory health insurance bodies available quickly - and this project has also raised the hopes of many start-ups. The President of BfArM, Prof. Karl Broich, gives an overview of the current status and acceptance of medical applications and even dares to state his predictions for them from 4 pm on Wednesday 18 November. The DiGA App Store, which is already available, acts as a digital healthcare application directory. Dr. Benedikt Zacher of Munich, who co-founded this directory, will explain the significance of this special app store.

Start-ups and the backers behind them

As one of the first digital healthcare investors, Flying Health states that it invested in digital healthcare in 2012 and brought the first app on prescription onto the market in 2014. Currently, Flying Health participates in the heal capital venture capital fund. The German Association of Private Health Insurers (PKV - Verband der Privaten Krankenversicherungen) thus promotes start-ups and their innovative digital healthcare products. Lina Behrens, the Managing Director of Flying Health, will chair the "From treatment to prevention" session on Monday 16 November from 10 am at the MEDICA HEALTH IT FORUM. One of the start-ups supported here is HelloBetter. They develop and market online training courses that promote mental wellbeing. Their portfolio comprises a range of online offers to help deal with stress, depression and anxiety disorders and additional special programmes for patients who experience these symptoms in conjunction with a chronic disease such as diabetes and preventive training sessions, which are also appropriate for the corona pandemic. One specific HelloBetter course is intended to support users in reinforcing their own mental health. Dr. Hanne Horvath, a Co-Founder of HelloBetter, Dennis Hermann from Kaia Health and Benjamin Westerhoff of the Barmer health insurance group will all appear in this session held within the scope of the MEDICA HEALTH IT FORUM.

Combating the virus with data donations

Being fasterthancorona.org is the objective of the website that Dr. med. Tobias Gantner founded and operates with a pan-European team. The founder and CEO of HealthCare Futurists GmbH, which holds its head offices in Cologne, will chair the "Sharing is caring - Data Sharing & Data Donations" session on Tuesday 17 November from 10 am. As with the data sharing app from RKI, this project also wants to collect altruistic data donations but without a direct link to wearables. Instead, they use clear medical hypotheses. "Ultimate success, for us, would be gaining more knowledge on COVID-19 due to our initiative". The potential hypotheses could be: "Are there medications that protect specific groups of people," or "Who is really at high-risk, and in what situation?". The web app creates course records for the data donators via an anonymised survey. The evidence of the data does not reach the standards set for randomised, placebo-controlled clinical studies, but the total quantity of data generated (big data) does support the notion that the data is useful for finding rudimentary patterns that indicate correlations and, in ideal scenarios, even causation. The AI implemented here is thus not used for therapeutic decisions. Instead, it is used for pattern recognition. The aim is to define computer-generated biomarkers using the evaluation of the data collected. Arthritic patients that are treated with chloroquine could be an interesting group in which to research the course of COVID-19. The data are not just analysed by the group themselves here. The information is completely anonymised and sent to other researchers, institutes and individuals upon request, after an external check of the scientific hypothesis has been carried out. “We wanted to expand the toolbox for epidemiology a bit,” states Dr. Gantner.

The entire programme for virtual.MEDICA 2020 (16 - 19 November), which hosts one German and one English stream every day in the Conference area, can be called up online from the middle of October. Online visitors can register to participate for free now at: https://virtual.medica-tradefair.com.

Most Popular Now

Is Your Marketing Effective for an NHS C…

How can you make sure you get the right message across to an NHS chief information officer, or chief nursing information officer? Replay this webinar with Professor Natasha Phillips, former...

Welcome Evo, Generative AI for the Genom…

Brian Hie runs the Laboratory of Evolutionary Design at Stanford, where he works at the crossroads of artificial intelligence and biology. Not long ago, Hie pondered a provocative question: If...

We could Soon Use AI to Detect Brain Tum…

A new paper in Biology Methods and Protocols, published by Oxford University Press, shows that scientists can train artificial intelligence (AI) models to distinguish brain tumors from healthy tissue. AI...

Telehealth Significantly Boosts Treatmen…

New research reveals a dramatic improvement in diagnosing and curing people living with hepatitis C in rural communities using both telemedicine and support from peers with lived experience in drug...

Research Study Shows the Cost-Effectiven…

Earlier research showed that primary care clinicians using AI-ECG tools identified more unknown cases of a weak heart pump, also called low ejection fraction, than without AI. New study findings...

AI can Predict Study Results Better than…

Large language models, a type of AI that analyses text, can predict the results of proposed neuroscience studies more accurately than human experts, finds a new study led by UCL...

New Guidance for Ensuring AI Safety in C…

As artificial intelligence (AI) becomes more prevalent in health care, organizations and clinicians must take steps to ensure its safe implementation and use in real-world clinical settings, according to an...

Remote Telemedicine Tool Found Highly Ac…

Collecting images of suspicious-looking skin growths and sending them off-site for specialists to analyze is as accurate in identifying skin cancers as having a dermatologist examine them in person, a...

Philips Aims to Advance Cardiac MRI Tech…

Royal Philips (NYSE: PHG, AEX: PHIA) and Mayo Clinic announced a research collaboration aimed at advancing MRI for cardiac applications. Through this investigation, Philips and Mayo Clinic will look to...

New Study Reveals Why Organisations are …

The slow adoption of blockchain technology is partly driven by overhyped promises that often obscure the complex technological, organisational, and environmental challenges, according to research from the University of Surrey...

Deep Learning Model Accurately Diagnoses…

Using just one inhalation lung CT scan, a deep learning model can accurately diagnose and stage chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), according to a study published today in Radiology: Cardiothoracic...

Shape-Changing Device Helps Visually Imp…

Researchers from Imperial College London, working with the company MakeSense Technology and the charity Bravo Victor, have developed a shape-changing device called Shape that helps people with visual impairment navigate...