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Laura Lovett

Laura Lovett

Laura Lovett is Managing Editor of MobiHealthNews where she covers the intersection of healthcare and technology. She is also a contributing editor to Women in Healthcare IT at Healthcare IT News. Before coming to MobiHealthNews she worked for Gatehouse Media, where she earned a New England Newspaper Association award. Most recently Lovett won a Umass Medical Media Fellowship.  Lovett was educated at the University of East Anglia, the University of Massachusetts and Oxford University.

Analytics
By Laura Lovett | 03:29 pm | November 19, 2018
Innovation Factory’s Alaa Chalabi talks using wearables to detect sleep disorders and snoring habits at WISH in Doha, Qatar last week.
Artificial Intelligent
By Laura Lovett | 12:47 pm | November 12, 2018
Amazon Translate, Amazon Comprehend and Amazon Transcribe will now be HIPAA eligible.
By Laura Lovett | 05:57 pm | November 02, 2018
Both the clinician and the patient hold an important piece to the care puzzle, according to Kristina Sheridan, head of the enterprise strategy and transformation department at the nonprofit MITRE Corporation.  The physician has expertise in treating illness, whereas the patient is the authority on living with the condition, she explained at the Society for Participatory Medicine in Boston this morning. But transferring the patient’s life experience into a useable dataset can pose challenges.  “We hear about patient-generated data all the time,” Sheridan said. “But when you hear about the context of that data, most of the time right now it is around wearable devices and monitoring devices. … People aren’t talking about the other type of patient-generated data, what we call active patient generated data — the patient voice.” Webinar: Big Data, Big Insight: A Conversation with Healthcare Analytics Leaders Sheridan knows about the patient perspective from her own life experiences caring for her two children, both of whom contracted Lyme disease when they were in grammar school. This condition led to major complications for her daughter. The symptoms of her condition became so overwhelming that her daughter started to think of them as the new normal and stopped mentioning them to doctors. That was when Sheridan put together an Excel spreadsheet to help keep track of her daughter’s symptoms.  “I finally had something to back up that gut feeling that something was off. When progress was slow and my treatment was plateauing, the data helped encourage me that things were still getting better,” Kate Sheridan, Kristina’s daughter who videoed into the session remotely, said. “But when things declined it was still beneficial to see. Sometimes between my myriad of symptoms it could be hard for me to identify and communicate exactly what was getting worse. Small changes in my condition could mean an infection or a bad reaction to meds and catching those symptoms prevented a trip to the emergency room. The data helped legitimize what I was feeling and gave me confidence in evaluating and communicating my own state of health. Data has power.” This experience prompted Sheridan, a trained engineer in astronautics and space, to change careers. She now works with the research nonprofit MITRE to develop a digital Patient Toolkit, which lets patients digitally record symptoms, treatments and medications. It also lets patients communicate with their providers.  While she was inspired to get involved with patient data because of her personal journey, the Patient Toolkit comes from a slew of additional research. MITRE worked with the University of Virginia to listen to what patients wanted from a tool like this. The team found patients were mostly managing their own condition without digital tools, that patients wanted to be heard by providers and felt positively towards e-health tools.  The team also worked with Carnegie Mellon to listen to what providers wanted from patient generated data. The answer was longitudinal severity and compliance data.  Sheridan pointed out that most of the patient experience happens away from provider’s office. The toolkit was developed to remedy this gap.  “I don’t know any other experts who have no tool to support them in the 99 percent of time they are applying their expertise,” Sheridan said. “Patients are at home managing their own chronic condition the majority of the time, and they are in the clinic for [a small] amount of time.” The toolkit was designed to help facilitate that patient input and let patients see their symptoms over the course of time.   “The best care is when patients are included and acting together,” Sheridan said.   
By Laura Lovett | 05:43 pm | November 02, 2018
MIT's Cynthia Breazeal is developing "social robots" that could help care for patient's emotional wellbeing.
Artificial Intelligent
By Laura Lovett | 01:10 pm | November 02, 2018
Savvy hospitals like Boston Children’s and NHS facilities are working with chatbot startups to create new ways to interface with patients seeking care.
Privacy & Security
By Laura Lovett | 06:34 pm | October 23, 2018
Infosec experts share advice about what innovators should track, security-wise, when building new apps and devices.
Cybersecurity
By Laura Lovett | 03:16 pm | October 17, 2018
As texting between patients and providers becomes more common, it’s imperative that providers consider the right platform to use and other security features to protect patient data.
Cybersecurity
By Laura Lovett | 11:16 am | October 04, 2018
BlackBerry' new healthcare-related security products include a blockchain system for medical data and operating system for secure medical devices.
Innovation
By Laura Lovett | 04:26 pm | September 17, 2018
The global aging population may be straining resources, but could also be what pushes digital health innovations.
Innovation
By Laura Lovett | 02:55 pm | September 14, 2018
Though not without critics, the FDA has advanced regulatory processes for apps, medical devices, genomics and clinical decision support.