3 minute read
Health Professional News
Advances in asthma technology
Asthma technology in New Zealand has had two important advances in recent months with the release of a new asthma management app and funding secured for the development of real-time risk prediction tool.
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Senior clinical research fellow at the School of Pharmacy, University of Auckland, Dr Amy Chan has received $250,000 from the Health Research Council to use over the next three years to develop a tool to help patients and whānau predict the risk of asthma attacks. In the first stage, Dr Chan will collect data including step counts, sleep patterns, breathing rates, medication use, peak flow rates and weather patterns from both the environment and smart devices.
She will then use artificial intelligence (AI) techniques to analyse this data and determine which factors are most predictive of the asthma attacks. The final stage will involve building a risk predication model that can be integrated in a smartphone app, allowing users to monitor their risk of asthma attacks in real time and take preventative action.
Locally designed and developed asthma management app, RespiTrak, was launched in late July by Active Health Tech. The subscription-based app allows users to record data on their symptoms and general health, and record their peak flow using a Bluetooth peak flow device which feeds data directly to the app.
The app can be used by individuals or families, with one subscription covering a parent and up to five children. The app costs $20 per month, but RespiTrak product manager Brent Sorensen says the company will offer a limited number of free lifetime subscriptions through asthma societies to those most at need. They are also hopeful that the Ministry of Health will eventually see the value in purchasing this technology for all New Zealanders.
The app will save users’ data securely and allow users to share this data with health professionals in personalised reports. The developers have plans to incorporate more data into the app in the future. The first feature in development will provide information on quantities and sources of pollen in the environment. To supply this information, Active Health Tech is looking to install 12 pollen sensors at key locations across New Zealand to collect data on pollen.
Once installed, the sensors will feed the data to the cloud where AI technology will analyse the findings and send them to the RespiTrak app. The company hopes to have the first three sensors in place in Auckland by early September 2022.
Wellington
Speaker: Dr James Fingleton (respiratory physician, President of the NZ branch of The Thoracic Society of Australia and New Zealand, and Medical Director for ARFNZ)
Date: 26 October 2022
Dunedin
Speaker: Professor Bob Hancox (Research Professor and Head of Preventive and Social Medicine at the University of Otago)
Date: 16 November 2022
Presentations will be followed by a Q&A session and a coffee and catch up.
All attendees will receive: a copy of the NZ COPD Guidelines, a COPD Quick Reference Guide, COPD action plans in various languages, and a free registration for the Foundation’s Asthma and COPD Fundamentals eLearning course, valued at $135.
Please contact joanna@arfnz. org.nz to express your interest in attending these events.