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[MATT] Now, we are going to have a look at the world of the clinic, and we have somebody here,
Stephen Hau, who is, as you know,
the original founder of PatientKeeper, but now is here
with a brand new company Shareable Ink, and it really is a fascinating way of putting
digital pen and paper where you can basically enter patient records directly
using a digital pen and iPad.
Stephen has pointed out that even in the healthcare industry, there's a lot
more growth of medical records and data in the health industry, but we're
not quite there off the paper yet,
and so Shareable Ink's got a really interesting way of creating what
Stephen calls "data liquidity" and putting these two things together without losing productivity,
so Stephen take it away! [STEVE] Thank you very much.
So collectively we are trying to facilitate
better, cheaper healthcare, and I make the argument that we just can't get
there without data.
Now, the irony is in our industry
good, clean data sometimes hard to come by.
As mentioned, at Shareable Ink, we believe in data liquidity,
and I'm going to demonstrate two things: (1) what we can do once we have the data
but also, and perhaps more importantly,
(2) how we create the data.
I'll demonstrate our enterprise cloud approach of actually converting physician
inputs... natural inputs like: handwriting
from digital pens, from iPads, from scanned documents. We are even looking at
bringing in audio files,
and converting that natural input into codified structure data.
I'm going to log into the web browser here, and
as I mentioned, I am going to start with the analytics module.
I'm going to look at perioperative antibiotics.
It's well understood that in some surgical cases
if you provide antibiotics before the incision, they deliver a better
outcome, reduces complications, reduces hospital readmission. I'm going to
drill down and mask the less interesting data,
where...
antibiotics were not required or that were required and given in, and we will just take a
look at...
examples where...
antibiotics were required but not given, and I'm able to actually drill and
pull the source document.
What I like about our analytics capability is the
ability to start at the global level,
find an outlier, drill down, and actually find the source document.
In this case, the source document is
actually a piece of paper,
and in the realm of the anesthesia market 93% of
anesthesiologists in the United States document on paper.
So how do we get that data
off a piece of paper?
Well, as I mentioned we provide physicians with a digital pen, which is
really just a pen with a camera in it. It's network capable, sends the pen strokes to
our cloud, where we then process the information.
So here via browser, I'm looking at a partially filled out anesthesia record
and because of all this is cloud-based, we essentially have an infinite amount
of computing power.
We are able to convert what the physician wrote
into data. Here, the physician said he inserted an 18-gauge IV in
the left forearm.
We converted that "18" to a
typewritten eighteen,
left = Boolean True, and forearm = Boolean true.
Similarly, appendectomy,
and I'm not even sure he spelled it right, but our system said "Hey, yeah that's appendectomy."
So, a very, very cool way to convert what physicians are doing today
into structure data.
Let me show you the iPad version of our product,
which we are very proud of. Like a lot of iPad apps, we have
the ability provide data in a form-based view; this isn't unusual.
And, here, if you like
flipping through screens and all that,
you can enter data through a form based view.
However, being Shareable Ink, we've also provided something novel that we call
"freestyle" --
and that's the ability to document
as if it were paper on the iPad in a very familiar and comfortable way.
The last thing that I want to show you is
an early preview of the next version of our dashboard.
We believe that there's almost a social contract with the physician:
if you're going to provided data to us, then we are going to provide data back to you.
So with our new dashboard, we include elements of social networking
and "gamification" to let physicians know where they stand of relative to their
peers and their cohorts. Thanks a lot!