{"id":12862,"date":"2015-10-08T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2015-10-08T05:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/centricconsulting.com\/post\/hacking-at-the-cleveland-medical-hackathon\/"},"modified":"2021-12-15T00:12:22","modified_gmt":"2021-12-15T05:12:22","slug":"hacking-at-the-cleveland-medical-hackathon","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/centricconsulting.com\/blog\/hacking-at-the-cleveland-medical-hackathon\/","title":{"rendered":"Hacking at The Cleveland Medical Hackathon"},"content":{"rendered":"
On September 26 through 27 in 2015, Centric participated in the inaugural Cleveland Medical Hackathon\u00a0at the Global Center for Health Innovation. The goal was to build an app in 24 hours that would improve care, reduce costs and enhance the overall patient experience.<\/p>\n
The team included experienced hackers and first-timers, and not all developers. So what did this disparate group think of the event? What were the lessons learned? In this series of articles, hear their unique perspective on this enlightening event.<\/p>\n
The concept behind ManageRx was to tweak the pill bottle by adding a low-cost Bluetooth sensor to it. The goal of our project was to improve the efficacy and track of when patients take their medication. In a short phrase: make sure patients are taking the right medication at the right time.<\/p>\n
Our team was made up of technologists, healthcare subject matter experts, project managers, and marketing mavens. We also had an assist from one of the vendors (SmartRx) at the HIMSS center who provided us with a few pill bottles and unique perspective on the prescription filling market.<\/p>\n
Once on the ground in Cleveland, our team set to work on the solution and the business case. On the solution side, we had several components to build:<\/p>\n
On the business side, we dug deeper on the metrics on prescription medication:<\/p>\n
During the whole process, we received great feedback from the mentors, judges, and even a lawyer who advised us on any potential FDA testing concerns with our \u201cdevice.\u201d Late on Saturday evening, we began preparing our presentation and finalizing our demo. By 7 a.m. on Sunday, we had a working demo and a presentation that could be casually read in about 15 minutes. We then set about condensing the presentation and demo down to 5 minutes, a monumental task. By the time our name was called to take the podium, our team was exhausted by excited to present our idea. The resulting 5 minutes were a blur or slides, screenshots, and statistics which hopefully came across as a compelling argument for an improved pill bottle.<\/p>\n
When it was over, everyone on our team agreed that we were better for the experience, met a lot of people with great ideas, and walked away with the start of a good idea that we will definitely build upon in the near future.<\/p>\n