Player is loading...

Embed

Copy embed code

Transcriptions

Note: this content has been automatically generated.
00:00:00
thank you very much for the introduction um i must say i feel a bit
00:00:03
out of place in this they filled with alone lenses and robot um
00:00:08
hope you dicks every two videos and i'm here to talk about
00:00:13
nursing or you know it's um so i hope you'll forgive me that i don't have
00:00:18
very cool three d. videos and stuff exodus they
00:00:22
already said we focus on creating simplicity creating
00:00:27
user experiences for nursing home yep it's um which is challenging
00:00:33
but on the other and uh if you look at the bright side of things from my perspective um you
00:00:38
will all at one time in the future be customers of mine so i'll just have to be patient
00:00:47
my first slide is um maybe a little unorthodox um
00:00:52
but it's a lake up in the mountains here and i went a running
00:00:56
there yesterday morning high rent to this um lake i run around it
00:01:01
it's a very beautiful lake and if you have your uh the object you should go there
00:01:07
the reason i'm showing you this picture because people use pictures to capture memories too
00:01:15
capture emotions and to share them with others i could simply tell you well there's a there's
00:01:21
a nice lake up in the mountains and you should go there and i'm showing you
00:01:26
how beautiful scenery as it might um promote you going there
00:01:32
and that's basically what activate for health is focusing on promoting people to be active
00:01:39
both physically i cognitively in search of their memories in search of emotions
00:01:46
but let's take a couple of steps back in time um because
00:01:50
the story of activate for health actually start my brother
00:01:53
who's the director of nursing on any notice that in these nursing only at the yeah the physiotherapy room with
00:02:00
um stationary bikes and some other physiotherapy equipment um where his inhabitants
00:02:05
bake in there and they get there we can exercise
00:02:09
and when they were sitting on their stationary bikes for fifteen twenty minutes what they saw was this
00:02:18
nothing
00:02:20
they were looking at the wall of blind wall now imagine you
00:02:25
doing your exercises at the phase a therapist looking at this
00:02:31
who would be motivated to come back next we can do the same exercises
00:02:36
no but so that was basically the starting point what we said what
00:02:40
um what we wanna do is we want to create an experience
00:02:45
for these um people that can't go outside anymore with
00:02:49
restrictions um but they still have to be physically
00:02:52
active and we wanna make sure that it's safe but it's also motivating and of phone environment
00:03:01
and we started developing it we soon discovered that there was really very important
00:03:06
things that we needed to take into account and the first thing is
00:03:10
it's all about user experience um usually when you think about um active and
00:03:16
healthy a gene this is the kind of images that you get
00:03:20
seventy year olds on bikes in the sunshine having a lot of
00:03:24
fun while in reality our audience is more like this
00:03:30
so when we started developing our technology we need to make sure that whether you
00:03:34
are a happy and active seventy year old are very frail in maybe
00:03:40
i'm very uncertain eighty five ninety to ninety are all suffering from dementia
00:03:46
but you still had a valuable user experience without being
00:03:51
stigma ties thing about restrictions that you might stuff
00:03:55
and then the second thing that we focused on was autonomy because as you grow older a lot of autonomous taken away from you
00:04:02
i'm in a nursing home you're told when to you what to what to wear what to do with your day um
00:04:09
and you lose a lot off your autonomy so in developing our technology we looked at
00:04:17
first thing is you decide what kind of physical activity you want to do
00:04:22
outside we have a stationary bike but it also works on the treadmill
00:04:25
on the rowing machine the cross trainer it's the user that the
00:04:28
sites which type of physical activity he or she wants to engage
00:04:33
or the second thing is we use google switch you images
00:04:37
and all the countries in blue are the ones covered um by pools a
00:04:41
database of search we may just end it offers them the opportunity
00:04:45
to go to places that they want to go maybe they were on holidays in new
00:04:51
york ten years ago and they just wanna visit new york again let's go there
00:04:56
most people want to go to the places where they grew up with a
00:05:00
work order when on holidays with their children with where their memories are
00:05:05
and that's what we offer them by using these books which religious and then the last
00:05:10
um aspect of autonomy is at each intersection you get these arrows saying what
00:05:15
this is the way you can go you can go back you can go for what it's up to you to decide where you want to go
00:05:23
and then the fact that we offer people full autonomy to go wherever they want
00:05:28
to visit the places which are important to them we've we trigger really
00:05:33
um the third important focus point and that's rim innocence reminiscence
00:05:38
is sharing personal stories with others and this is what we found
00:05:43
out was the key aspect of the technology that we develop
00:05:48
this is a picture that was sent to me a couple of months ago by one of our customers
00:05:53
and the lady in a wheelchair on the left um estimate and she's driving up move on to
00:06:01
and i asked them why does she want to drive up more want to well because her son was preparing
00:06:08
to go to move on to and she wanted to experience what it was like she'd never been there
00:06:13
and so by experiencing what more want to look like and what the c. remote
00:06:18
like she hoped that she could talk with your son about what he was
00:06:23
going uh to works and the second it's example of how um our technology helps people
00:06:29
um to remove their pet that they're past is this kind of setting in
00:06:34
nursing on for like thirty forty people i'm coming together we um connect our
00:06:40
tablet to a big screen and these people simply gotten virtuosity trip together
00:06:44
they deciding group when we want to go let's go to paris or let's go to the seaside
00:06:49
what you what you see is that you got this five six
00:06:53
people out of these thirty they're constantly talking congresses and
00:06:56
i used to go there and we used to go in that that that that that that and all the others
00:07:00
they're just sitting there enjoying the talks and that way
00:07:04
you're creating a social network people sharing memories that
00:07:09
if you want to talk to your mother or your grandmother depending on how old you are um
00:07:14
for two minutes as to what you did last week but if you want to
00:07:17
talk for two hours ask what you did twenty years ago there is
00:07:21
it's incredible the amount of detail and the stories that people have related
00:07:26
two episodes in their past five ten fifteen years ago and that's basically what we're focusing on
00:07:35
now obviously working with elderly people give there's a lot of challenges
00:07:41
they are intrinsically heterogeneous the physical and cognitive capacities of an eighty
00:07:47
five year old are tremendously different there's people that can
00:07:50
do anything themselves and they don't want to be bothered by being stigma ties will do it for you know
00:07:56
they have to do with themselves and this has been very frail but they don't want to be reminded of that
00:08:04
so being non stigma ties in in developing solutions that offer them a maximum
00:08:10
of autonomy very very important when you're working with our older people
00:08:15
you also have to keep in mind that i'm a different very different from all
00:08:20
the other examples that we've seen these are people that don't know tablets
00:08:25
they don't know how to swipe or how to how to see how
00:08:29
to set up a tab what i'm so even very simple modules
00:08:35
all put together can be very complex and confusing for them apart saying look i'm batteries almost done
00:08:42
it's for them uh i've broken the system it for them it's it's it's a frightfully event
00:08:47
so it's very very difficult for them to really develop a fine user experience and and also as
00:08:53
a company something that we are i'm facing with is that user experience is very very differently
00:09:00
if you're looking at the elderly and user versus the caregiver defeats the purpose for example and versus the buyer um
00:09:09
and simply because i thought this was a scientific i'm i'm a scientific or conference and i
00:09:15
wanted to add a couple of grass rather than just pictures of old ladies um
00:09:20
this is something which is called the to productivity curve and it's about how you
00:09:25
must add features in relation to productivity of tools and you have this optimal
00:09:30
set of features are where you have the optimal productivity off your to the problem that we're facing is
00:09:38
we don't have one curve we don't have people that we can train
00:09:42
to use the tools um we need to take into account
00:09:45
the incredible heterogeneity that's available in our test population
00:09:50
so it's very difficult for us to decide which of the tools which of the features are valuable
00:09:56
for the older the people and which ones uh well when we can do away with
00:10:01
so what we're trying to do at the moment i'm in these are our future development
00:10:05
it's really focusing how can we make things as simple
00:10:09
as possible there is no value in complexity
00:10:13
when you are working with older people because they cannot warren
00:10:18
to manage a complex system and basically what we're doing now is we're developing a kind of
00:10:22
a light version of what we do which is simply is a one quick solution
00:10:27
for older people but at the same time um we also want to
00:10:31
refine our unique selling proposition and look at other technologies because
00:10:36
um for example my grand my wife's grandfather is eighty seven
00:10:41
years old you had a tutor count before me
00:10:44
this fact very tech savvy um and you also want to give dan
00:10:48
challenges so we're constantly looking at this balance between keeping things very
00:10:52
simple but also i'm trying to motivate people to go a step further
00:10:58
and see how far we can push them to what's frustration
00:11:02
and just because i knew that this was with this with excited we're also looking
00:11:06
at um specifically with students some sandbox project how v. r. goggles for example
00:11:12
um can be valuable the only thing that we see um when we're working with the elderly
00:11:18
and v. r. goggles um is that on the one hand i'm just mixed emotions
00:11:22
there's already been some questions about motion sickness and stuff um and also um
00:11:29
it's kind of um has a negative effect on the social activity if your
00:11:36
wearing your virtual reality goggles your more it's more personalised experience well we
00:11:41
uh feel that the biggest added value is in opening everything up
00:11:45
projecting it on the big screen and having others um
00:11:49
looking into that are and enjoy joining in on the activity that you're doing
00:11:54
as a sadist i already told me um we were awarded a a price but european commission
00:12:00
for uh for this technology and because of because we want
00:12:04
this price we are currently um scaling up our international
00:12:08
um efforts so we are looking for business partners in and outside of switzerland
00:12:13
um so if you are interested um common ever talk with me
00:12:17
these are more my contact details and i'm also outside thank you very much
00:12:27
this e. book who um just pull that's really that's really well
00:12:33
was was you don't hear the two people proposes to keep the seventies still
00:12:39
thank you that was extremely interesting uh when if you
00:12:44
are partnering already lines are providing some evidence based
00:12:49
uh data about functions that are like these types of experiences and
00:12:55
from your technologies this were um in september th is due
00:12:59
to the starting looking at uh quantifying the target given
00:13:03
and physical health impact um we specifically do knots
00:13:09
um hum position ourselves asthmatic device yet
00:13:14
um because we don't we can't we focus on quality of life
00:13:20
not on improving else because the nursing home inhabitants there's very little
00:13:26
health gain to be made um and be primary focus is on improving quality of life and
00:13:33
actually um it it always sounds a little strange uh when
00:13:38
i tell it but i've seen multiple locations where um
00:13:42
older people being put back in the position where um house
00:13:46
where they use them if they actually start crying and
00:13:51
i make a little i make all women cry baby basically and that's i think that's a good thing
00:13:56
because it means that we trigger exactly what we want to achieve and that's the emotional
00:14:02
um the emotional value and that's what we focus on not on the medical impact
00:14:09
oh yeah and right but the quality of like can can be paired with space closer to do such is uh
00:14:18
dosage of medication to treat some of the most of the servers uh such as numbers of incidence of
00:14:24
whatever you want to the falling in terms of a complex with other resins
00:14:31
so i think there may be intermediates certain i it is allowed to do list
00:14:37
so we're we are so they are planning on doing more quote if
00:14:42
um scientific study uh on the impact off of our technology on the on the hell yes
00:14:48
great success
00:14:50
no clue 'cause joe

Share this talk: 


Conference Program

Mot d'introduction
Sébastien Mabillard, Coordinateur projets e-health, Fondation The Ark
June 8, 2017 · 6:05 p.m.
376 views
Les Technologies Cognitives ou l'Homme Augmenté
Jérôme De Nomazy, IBM Suisse
June 8, 2017 · 6:09 p.m.
115 views
Les Technologies Cognitives ou l'Homme Augmenté - Questions du public
Jérôme De Nomazy, IBM Suisse
June 8, 2017 · 6:41 p.m.
Mot de bienvenue
Sébastien Mabillard, Coordinateur projets e-health, Fondation The Ark
June 9, 2017 · 9:04 a.m.
Présentation de Swiss Digital Health
Frédéric Bagnoud, CimArk
June 9, 2017 · 9:07 a.m.
138 views
Présentation des instituts de recherche HES-SO Valais-Wallis
Laurent Sciboz, directeur Institut Informatique de Gestion | HES-SO Valais/Wallis
June 9, 2017 · 9:11 a.m.
119 views
Virtually Better: How Virtual Reality is Easing Pain, Calming Nerves and Improving Health the Drug-Free Way
Brennan Spiegel, Director of Health Services Research, Cedars-Sinai Health System
June 9, 2017 · 9:21 a.m.
193 views
Augmented Reality-assisted surgery
Luc Soler, Directeur de la R&D et Professeur PAST, IRCAD, IHU
June 9, 2017 · 11:22 a.m.
287 views
Réalité virtuelle dans le traitement des troubles mentaux
Eric Malbos, Psychiatre et spécialiste du traitement en réalité virtuelle, CHU Conception
June 9, 2017 · 11:56 a.m.
378 views
La Simulation Numérique pour les Professionnels de Santé
Xavier Abadie, Directeur du Développement International, SimforHealth
June 9, 2017 · 12:28 p.m.
105 views
AR for different medical use cases
Antoine Widmer, Professeur HES & co-fondateur d'Adventures Lab
June 9, 2017 · 2:04 p.m.
Augmented reality for medical applications
Henrique Galvan Debarba, Chercheur senior, Fondation Artanim
June 9, 2017 · 2:15 p.m.
110 views
Virtual reality solutions for stroke rehabilitation
Andrea Serino, Responsable de la recherche en neurosciences, Mindmaze
June 9, 2017 · 2:34 p.m.
123 views
Virtual Reality combined with haptic robotics for rehabilitation
Aurélien Fauquex, Directeur Exécutif et co-fondateur, Lambda Health System
June 9, 2017 · 2:48 p.m.
101 views
Creating a valuable user experience for nursing home inhabitants
Roel Smolders, Directeur Exécutif, Active84Health
June 9, 2017 · 3:05 p.m.
TABLE RONDE : Quelle innovation pour la santé du futur en Suisse?
Eric Beer, Henning Müller, Pascal Detemmerman, Victor Fournier, Resp: Head of Customer Engagement e-Health (Swiss Post), Professeur en informatique médicale HES-SO Valais-Wallis, Directeur Exécutif SwissEnov, Chef du service de la santé publique du Canton du Valais
June 9, 2017 · 3:20 p.m.
104 views

Recommended talks

Mots d'introduction
Esther Waeber-Kalbermatten, cheffe du Département valaisan de la santé
June 6, 2014 · 9:04 a.m.