Where: Campus Library - Sea View Room
Credit: 8
Description
An offering with a pre-selection process
About this workshop
The goal of this collaborative design workshop is to develop a Personalized Medical App. It will leverage mobile phones' capabilities to empower patients, making them an active and integral part of their personalized healthcare and wellbeing. How? Through easy access to their health information, tools, and resources.
In this fast-paced patient-centered design challenge, we seek to understand and design a tool which improves how individuals experience the healthcare system. Additionally, it will facilitate the implementation of personalized medicine as a standard of effective patient treatments. With both patient and healthcare teams involved and informed through an app, we contribute to the effective implementation of personalized medicine.
Check out this event’s photo gallery!
Check out the highlights video of this event!
Aida Rivera
Aida Rivera, PE is a licensed professional engineer, educator, design consultant and co-founder of d.heritage2tech. Beginning her career at NASA she has worked in risk analysis modeling, project management, structural, civil, earthquake and mechanical engineering. Aida earned a B.S. in Civil Engineering from Florida Institute of Technology and M.S. in Civil Engineering and Structural Engineering from Stanford University followed by postgraduate research in Mechanical Engineering at Monash University in Australia as a Rotary International Ambassadorial Fellow.
Myraida Rivera
Myraida Rivera, AIA is a licensed architect, civil engineer, project manager, and design consultant. Prior to co-founding d.heritage2tech she worked in pharmaceutical, commercial, residential, and product design projects. At KAUST, she co-founded its Makerspace (currently ProtoLab) and recently instructed KAUST’s first FabAcademy. Myraida received an undergraduate degree in Environmental Design and graduate degrees in Architecture from the University of Puerto Rico and Civil Engineering, Construction Engineering and Management from Stanford University.
No resources found.
No links found.