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so hello everybody my name's current on the l. um i'm the founder
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little innovation and i'm going to be presenting my project which is called the uh and plastic no work
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um i'm just gonna die straighten because some uh more down to a kind of practical person on an
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engineer an ideal nuts and bolts and try to
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build things that are gonna have practicality for ordinary people
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so no problem i'm looking at really is um the healthcare process
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in my opinion and opinion of probably many of the people here
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it's very fragmented not very transparent it's complicated and it's expensive
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now add data is held in so many different places
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it's not very compatible and it's very difficult to get hold off i mean i have to go to see him
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the hospital sign a piece of paper uh i can get a copy
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of my m. r. i. then i take it to my family doctor
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and handed over and sign another piece of paper saying he has been
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mentioned for so it's very bureaucratic and you know i i'm getting rather frustrated
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well yeah is data collected there's a list
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for here and the main points really ah
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that data is collected on a lot of devices all recorded on some kind of computer
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it's an an an electronic format and
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we can see why our records is
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so fragmented because the process itself is fragmented
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okay other places i mean these guys know more about me than any body else
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so i had to go for a physical and they produce the folder like that thick
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and i wondered where did you get all that and who gave you permission on why haven't i got it
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simple question
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so this is the type of data that we collect and there's
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a lot and again the main take away points ah it is possible to
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aggregate this data it's also possible to put it to some kind of practical units
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right now you know if i look at what happens
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you know we just thought data and fall those or on
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computers and it doesn't really do much you know it's pretty
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static so i decided that i wanted to create something called
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the impact the net work and it's basically a clout based system
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so what is it still in very very simple terms very
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simple towns his you and you connect to a virtual twine
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a virtual twin is really a composite of all the different layers of
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data that we collect so i'm an x. ray gives me my skeleton
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and m. r. i. gives me my physiology you know with ligaments and so on
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and then maybe a c. t. scan that gives me my musculature so that what i have
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and eighty visualisation of my physical my
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physical body as it exists right now
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and how do we do this it's quite simple like dine at very practical here
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patient is connected to devices devices generate
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data which are connected to routers and switches
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transmit the data the cloud here but i'm designing connects virtual devices back
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to the physical device and uh for the patient we receive the data
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we translated for mac to maybe do it up in a tree annotation
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and then send it on to an analytical system which can then
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represent the data in digital form i possibly even in a graphic form
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as your virtual twine know why is this interesting because
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if i have a problem here maybe i have a hot or it's me uh and some device picks it up
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a doctor can see that happening in my virtual twente
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this is kind of makes sense you guys
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so why would i want to do this well all my data would be in one place because it would
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be in the analytic system um it helps me to
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detect things early a quick that it can improve my intervention
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time if i get to a problem oh yeah the interventions gonna be earlier and therefore this you know
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but is it going to be an improvement to the
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therapy plan you know and everything shortens down and therefore
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stable lies in my cost you know i went through an episode a few years ago
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and at one point i was paying two thousand a month
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out of pocket because i wasn't covered by the necessary insurance
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two thousand a month in my situation was like that's a month's rent you now so
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i need this i need this more than anything and as i already mentioned
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patient record systems is static they don't do anything except store data or records
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for other people to dawn create q. j. i. systems to go
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on i'm allies but then still nothing's actually happened for me personally
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how am i going to do this well here's some cases um home care
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has one case here h. in population
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longterm conditions so remote monitoring early detection
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on testing sleep that yeah that's an interesting problem when you go for sleep on your test
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you go into a hospital room and there's a whole wall of machines you have about thirty
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cents is connected to your body and then they expect you to have a good night's sleep
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now sixty percent of those tests
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failed because the patient consciously there's too
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much noise from all the cooling fans in the machines there's too much light
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the temperature of the room is usually above twenty five celsius so how
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am i gonna sleep and how was that meaningful now if i take this
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equipment to my house to my home the room is nice and the ah car i don't
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have to worry about temperature noise and i can run the test for maybe three or four days
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and then i got a meaningful set of data that can be used
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further down the line for the diagnostic process wanna look at hospitals we can use
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as i've already mentioned we can use the virtual twente
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for diagnostic tool but maybe the patient is in a coma
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a very important part of the doctor patient relationship is to be able to ask questions
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but it's the patients in a coma how you gonna extract the relevant information
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but if you have a digital when they're available then you can start to run
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diagnostics without actually having to interfere with
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the patient so it's non intrusive very important
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maybe the patient has some kind of weird disease there in isolation
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you can't be in the same room with that person but you can certainly be
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in the same room as the digital twin because digit twin doesn't have a disease right
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i might be a target though that the and here is really to
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get into i'm still pretty stage three clinical trials and former co kinetics
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why is this interesting because pick phenomena is now chasing off the personalised medicine
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and uh what they're really interested in is to
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be able to customise the dosage in a medication now
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somebody like me um one meter eighty seven highway ninety five kilos
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i'm going to require a different dosage to somebody who's half my size twice my age
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which would be difficult they probably beat that actually but okay the the the um
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but you see my point there right we're all different you know so if i'm going
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to create or somebody's gonna create personalised medicine
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why shouldn't i in my virtual twice and
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have some kind of process normalised diagnostic process
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you know kind of matches uh makes sense
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okay so my time's running out that's how i'm gonna do
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it okay so this is just the upright fix feedback loop
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um validate and deploy i'm i'm that's basically
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a cut cookie cutter method for building my systems
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um timeline here i'm gonna pilot with the university hospital bottle
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and build a proposition first with spit types which is about the home care
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and then i'm going to go to it or see a dossier a very interesting company they have about five or six
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so it's the h. one stage two molecules i want to bring to market
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there are not a very big company and they would serve as a great pilot for me
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to be able to go into the big dogs which are now about to some russians on
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i mean i live in the middle but also all these guys were on my doorstep the way i'm
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gonna do it is the old way or have to knock on doors and ask questions and engage with people
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um yeah one expenses bottom line forty thousand writing
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uh that will be starting and uh twenty twenty
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and that's the team it's just me i have to

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