Startufpest 2016: Dr. Jonathan Kanevsky - Future of

64
@JonKMD THE FUTURE OF MEDICINE

Transcript of Startufpest 2016: Dr. Jonathan Kanevsky - Future of

PowerPoint Presentation

@JonKMD

THE FUTURE OF MEDICINE

Deaths following major operations fell by more than 40% after the introduction of ______________WHO 2009

This is a b-17, known as the flying fortress. There were far fewer B-17s than needed at the start of WWII3

This was due to this. Not that it was too complicated for one man to fly, but it was too complicatd for one man to remember everything to fly it.

, inlarge partbecause ofthe tragic death of Major Pete Ployer Hill in 1935, when the B-17 was Model 299an experimental aircraft being tested at Wright Field

Ocotber 30, 1935Boeing test pilots, B-17 boeing swept the competition and was on track to secure 200 orers from the US army.

The plane made a normal taxi and take off, shrotly afterward it turned onto its wing and crashed in flames4

EventuallyBoeing was given contracts for a significant number of B-17s, but this delay meant the United States was two years into WWII before theAir Force had a sufficient number of the bombers.5

soa group of Air Force pilots and Boeing mechanics and pilots were given the task of allaying fears aboutit.Their solution was todevelop a list of the equipment that had to be in place and the actions that had to be done before take off, as well as lists for in-flight, prior to landing and after landing.Thelist would be in the cockpit and the co-pilot would read each step then wait for the pilot to check the status and verbally indicate it by saying Check. If the co-pilot couldnt make a check markeverything stopped until the situation was corrected. The flight checklist worked perfectly and made flight activities more organized.Soon, otherpilots heard aboutthe idea and developed checklists for their own planes. Within a short time it was required for all pilots in all aircraft.6

Current WHO standard is to have

2 time outs, one befor ehte procedure starts and one when it is over

check the name of the patientprocedure, site operatedantibiotics givenany concerns8

Counting surgical instruments has also become a practice to ensure patient safety-decreases efficiency, but increases safety12

Despite what you might think, some of the greatest medical advances havent been medical devices

They have been things that change behaviors

13

The future of medicine is about changing behaviors

And the ripple effect of changing behaviors of insurance providers, doctors, nurses, patients is what is interesting to startups and investors

14

AbstractionAlexdanco.com

Id like to introduce the concept of abstractionA close friend Alex danco first told me about this when we were students.It is applicable to many of the eco systems we see around us...

And i think it is essential to the future of medicine

15

Abstraction

Abstraction steps turn hard problems into easier problems

Diabetes management = very hard problem at layer i.

Solution = turn it into an easier problem at i+1.

Diabetes management

I said before that changing behaviours is key to creating change among patients and doctors.

The process of abstraction is changing the landscape of technology and how behaviors are changed.

Now that we root our understanding abstraction can change behaviours, Id like to talk aboutfour branches of technology in medicine that are rapidly growing and behavioral changes will flourish

1) Machine learning - Imagia2) Augmented/Virtual Reality Applied VR, Hololens/ VIPAR4) Personalized Medicine simple contacts/ Sano/ Ella22

Artificial Intelligence against cancer

So what if u started to look at different data37

Biggest ML research hub in the world?

Yoshua Bengio, PhDUniversity of Montreal

Behavioral ChangesAutomated detection Less scanning by radiologists?Non-radiologist physicians begin reading medical imaging?More medical imaging devices on the cloud?Do patients voluntarily share more data?

Everyone of these points should be of interest to innovators and investors in healthcare!

-less scanning by radiologists -39

What is the role of the physician in the machine learning revolution?

What are the inherent biases and ethical issues with data collected?

Who gets access to this life saving technology?

Real World Augmented Reality Virtual RealityReality TV

Im the best1:15 PM

Next time someone tells you AR isnt going to pick up.47

Uses of AR/VR in HealthcareDoctorsConsultationIntra-operative

PatientsPain reductionAnxiety management

Google Cardboard saves baby's life

Behavioral ChangesDecreased pain medication reaction from big pharma?Will hospitals start regularly integrating AR/VR?Will there be an increased need for VR content?How do you make AR/VR more accessible in surgery?

Everyone of these points should be of interest to innovators and investors in healthcare!

-less scanning by radiologists -54

Personalized medicineis amedical procedurethat separates patients into different groupswith medical decisions, practices, interventions and/or products being tailored to the individual patient based on their predicted response or risk of disease. 57

Simple Health

-paradigm shift-optometrists out of work60

Behavioral ChangesLess reliance on doctors for basic cares, apps replace basic medical functions?How does insurance re-imburse for personalized preventative care?What do highly trained specialists without jobs go do?

Everyone of these points should be of interest to innovators and investors in healthcare!

-less scanning by radiologists -62

Revisit the concept of abstraction-patients to navigate and circumvent the traditional access to healthcare, diagnosis, and treatment63

Checklist for a good talkSlides with picturesSpeak slowlyPresent new ideasUse current events Leave them hanging, wanting more