Menopause And The City Project Launch

Expect engaging discussions, informative presentations, and interactive workshops led by experts in the field. A wide range of topics will be covered, including managing symptoms, maintaining physical and mental well-being, and navigating relationships during this transformative phase of life.

Date: Monday, 16th October
Time: 10am
Venue: iD8 Studio at The Gatelodge, Roe Lane (off Thomas Street), The Digital Hub, Dublin 8, D08 EY05. Get Directions on Google Maps.
Tickets: This event is free but you must register for a ticket at https://www.eventbrite.ie/e/menopause-and-the-city-tickets-708048069837
Further information: Please visit the event page at https://informd.ie/menopause-and-the-city

Menopause And The City is a Smart D8 pilot from Dr Louise Fitzgerald of Grafton Medical Practice/InforMD.ie. The pilot aims to educate women and their family and friends about menopause so they can be empowered to manage their symptoms using self-management strategies but equally know when to seek professional help appropriately.

A project with truly scalable potential, Dr Louise Fitzgerald is aiming for Dublin 8 to become the centre of the first city-wide approach to positive menopause education and support.

This free event — on 16th October — ahead of  World Menopause Day on the 18th  — is the launch event of Menopause And The City. It’s also the perfect opportunity to come together and discuss the challenges and experiences of menopause in a relaxed and informal setting.

Speakers include:

  • Aoife Nic Shamhráin, menopause specialist
  • Ciara McKenna, menopause specialist
  • Clare Farrell, women’s health physiotherapist
  • Orna O’Brien, senior dietitian
  • Centric Mental Health, chartered clinical counselling psychologist
  • Plus more to be announced, including keynote speaker

The event is free to attend but you must register in advance at https://www.eventbrite.ie/e/menopause-and-the-city-tickets-708048069837

For updates on the event please see https://informd.ie/menopause-and-the-city

Smart D8 Announces Four New Pilot Projects to Transform Health & Wellness Outcomes

Smart D8 is led by The Digital Hub, St James’s Hospital, Dublin City Council and Smart Dublin. One of five Smart Districts of the Smart Dublin programme and an urban demonstrator for improving health and wellbeing in an urban population, Smart D8 has today announced the successful applicants from their third call for pilot projects. A record number of 60 applications from private and public organisations were received. Four projects have been selected to focus on menopause, physical rehabilitation, exercise and sleep apnea and will share a €50,000 fund to advance their existing work:

Menopause and the City from Dr Louise Fitzgerald of Grafton Medical Practice/InforMD.ie: This pilot is seeking to create a better educational ecosystem around menopause health for both individuals as well as families and friends. A project with truly scalable potential, Dr Louise Fitzgerald is aiming for Dublin 8 to become the centre of the first city-wide approach to positive menopause education and support.

Brace from Conor Motyer: Brace is a community-based recovery app which seeks to assist patients who are undergoing physical rehabilitation. With an added focus on the mental wellness aspect of rehabilitation, Brace uses exercise tracking, gamification and community support to improve both recovery engagement and mental health outcomes arising from research that has found that rehab program completion rates can be as low as 50%.

MoveAhead from Dr Jamie McGann and Dr Johann Issartel: MoveAhead is based on years of clinical experience from both founders, as well as practical research carried out with the GAA which has found that children’s movement skills are deteriorating in line with increased use of screens and technology. MoveAhead is the world’s first motion tracking and movement analytics platform built specifically for children, which informs games to assist with improving children’s movement skills.

Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA) Identifier from Dr Brian Kent/St James’s Hospital: OSA Identifier is seeking to reduce the wait time for a sleep apnea diagnosis, which is currently up to two years. OSA Identifier has developed an app to provide at-home data which can be reviewed by clinical specialists and both inform and speed up diagnosis and treatment options for sleep apnea.

Jack Lehane, Smart D8 Ecosystem Manager, said:

“We were really impressed with the quality of applications for our most recent call for pilots. With the four successful projects we are confident that they have potential to address issues and conditions that are impacting large numbers of people. One thing which particularly stood out was the potential many of them have to scale. At the heart of Smart D8 is cross-sectoral collaboration that allows healthcare innovation to be fast tracked and these projects will greatly enable this.”

The Smart D8 consortium is led by The Digital Hub, St James’s Hospital, Dublin City Council and Smart Dublin, together with the Guinness Enterprise Centre, HSE Digital Transformation, Tyndall National Institute, St Patrick’s Mental Health Services, Trinity College Dublin Research & Innovation, Trinity Translational Medicine Institute, National College of Art & Design, and Health Innovation Hub Ireland.

The initial work of Smart D8 focused on significant community research to measure unmet population health and wellness needs.

Following on from this research, a number of pilot projects were actioned to directly respond to this community feedback. A range of innovations have already been rolled out with positive impacts on population health and wellbeing – reaching over 5,000 citizens in and around the Dublin 8 district, before scaling nationally. These initiatives include Heart of Our City which aimed at improving awareness around and management of cardiovascular disease in the community, Civic Dollars which enabled people to earn digital currency through spending time in local parks, and Ways To Wellbeing which boosted the wellbeing and mental health of elderly people by giving them the chance to connect with young people in their community in a meaningful way.

Smart D8 Call For Pilots 2023: Call Now Closed

[ This Call for Pilots is Now Closed ]

Following two years of success in engaging Enterprise, Academia and a range of relevant stakeholders, the Smart D8 initiative has delivered 8 impactful and scalable pilots. In 2023 this engagement will continue with a third open call for pilots.

Continuing to focus on the measured health and wellbeing needs of the 25,000 strong diverse Dublin 8 population, this call will focus on three themes namely:

  • Positive and Healthy Ageing,
  • Connected Patient in the Community, and
  • Population Health.

Smart D8 seek to support the development of impactful, scalable and sustainable pilots involving enterprise, academic and other relevant public and private stakeholders. The pilot proposals should be ready to deploy with end users and should be in a position to measure impacts within a six-month timeframe.

To apply, please submit your proposal here: https://smartdublin.ie/smart-districts/smart-d8/ by Friday, 05th May 2023 at 23:00

Smart D8 Pilot Call Themes

Some examples of the types of pilots which would be relevant to the Dublin 8 population are given here for illustrative purposes. Smart D8 takes a very broad perspective on population health and wellbeing. Balancing preventative approaches with the support for patients in the community and in innovation in the delivery of healthcare, the pilot call is broad in the application areas.

Positive and Healthy Ageing

  • General Preventative Health solutions that can be implemented in a community setting to maintain good health and wellbeing.
  • Support for patients living in the community.
  • Ways to better integrate the ageing population into communities.
  • Providing support for the ageing population making a valuable contribution to communities.
  • Health and wellbeing services focused on an ageing population.

Connected Patient in the Community

  • Connected Patient in the Community
  • Support for patients living in the community.
  • Health and wellbeing services focused on patients living in a community.
  • Chronic Disease Management which will allow people to manage chronic health conditions in the community.
  • Social prescribing and related services.
  • Support for community-based services.
  • Approaches to Health and wellbeing education and learning.

Population Health

  • Chronic Disease Management which will allow people to manage chronic health conditions in the community.
  • General Preventative Health solutions that can be implemented in a community setting to maintain good health and wellbeing.
  • Ways to encourage better exercise and nutrition.
  • Ways to reduce stress in the general population.
  • Approaches to Health and wellbeing education and learning.
  • Health and wellbeing services focused on a general population.

Who Should Apply?

The pilot call is open to all Enterprise, Academy, Public and Private sector organisations, who:

  • Offer innovative and scalable solutions (products, services or devices).
  • Provides new practices/solutions/perspectives that address an unmet need in the community.
  • Have a solution that is ready for end user deployment within six months.
  • Can be enabled by a co creation and collaboration with the Smart D8 partners and beyond.

Why Apply?

  • Opportunity to pilot and demonstrate the impact and scalability of your offering in a real-world community setting.
  • Access to a unique collaborative ecosystem with established clinical, academic, public and private sector engagement
  • Funding support available for selected pilots.
  • Project management support
  • Marketing and promotion support
  • Access to free workspace in Dublin 8 during the pilot period.

Application Process and Timelines

  • Process : Applicants must submit a completed application form through the Smart D8 website. Applicants can apply for more than one call.
  • Call opens : Monday, 27th March 2023
  • Call closes : on Friday, 05th May 2023 at 23:00
  • Evaluation of proposals :
    Your submission will be reviewed by expert panel drawn from the Smart D8 partners.  A shortlist of applicants will be selected and will be asked to make a presentation to the evaluation panel. An update on the call outcome is aimed to be provided to all applicants by end-May.   
  • Projects start : June 2023
  • Projects present results/interim results : December 2023

Evaluation & Selection Criteria

Pilot applications will be evaluated based on the following criteria :

  • Impact
    Smart D8 want to back projects which can produce and measure clear impacts.
  • Innovativeness
    A level of innovation in terms of technology, service will be required. Innovation in the approach taken to pilot the advance with end users will also be evaluated.
  • Scalability
    An evaluation will be made as to how scalable is your proposed solution after the pilot? Applications will be studied on the basis of the ambitions for scale and how will they be achieved.
  • Team & Resources
    The Smart D8 evaluation panel will consider what resources and people are being supplied to the pilot and what the ask is in terms of people and resources from Smart D8.
  • User-driven
    The evaluation team will look for proposal that are end user focussed. The measures of impacts on the health and wellbeing of the population of D8 will be scored.
  • Alignment with the objectives of the Smart D8 project
    Smart D8 takes a very broad perspective on population health and wellbeing. Balancing preventative approaches with the support for patients in the community and in innovation in the delivery of healthcare, the pilot will be evaluated against these objectives.

Smart D8 Opens New Call for Pilots for Health and Wellbeing Demonstrator

  • New call for pilot projects in three areas: Population Health, Positive and Healthy Ageing, and Connected Patients in the Community
  • Latest call for pilots follows significant work undertaken in the community to date, with a €50,000 fund available
  • Smart D8 is led by The Digital Hub, St James’s Hospital, Dublin City Council and Smart Dublin

‘Smart D8’ is an urban demonstrator providing opportunities for indigenous and international innovators to investigate how smart technology and innovative approaches can be used to improve health and wellbeing in an urban population.

Today, Smart D8 announces the launch of a new call for pilots.

Smart D8 is looking to engage and collaborate with private companies, academics, healthcare providers and public organisations who want to demonstrate their innovative solutions with the local community.

The initial work of Smart D8 focused on significant community research to measure unmet population health and wellness needs.

Following on from this research, a number of pilot projects were actioned to directly respond to this community feedback. A range of innovations have already been rolled out with positive impacts on population health and wellbeing – reaching over 5,000 citizens in and around the Dublin 8 district, before scaling nationally. These initiatives include Heart of Our City which aimed at improving awareness around and management of cardiovascular disease in the community, Civic Dollars which enabled people to earn digital currency through spending time in local parks, and Ways To Wellbeing which boosted the wellbeing and mental health of elderly people by giving them the chance to connect with young people in their community in a meaningful way.

Smart D8 is now seeking applications for a new round of pilot projects focused on Population Health, Positive and Healthy Ageing, and Connected Patients in the Community to continue health and wellbeing innovation in Dublin 8 and beyond.

Stephen Brennan, Head of Strategy and Partnerships at The Digital Hub and Chair of Smart D8, said:

“Smart D8 opens our third round of pilot project calls and is responding to real health and wellbeing needs of citizens in Dublin 8 and beyond – and looking for the best solutions to challenges in Population Health, Positive and Healthy Ageing, and Connected Patients in the Community. We are especially interested in working with those who want to demonstrate their products, services and research in real-world conditions.”

Jack Lehane, Smart D8 Ecosystem Manager, said:

“Community outreach has been at the heart of Smart D8 since its inception. This new call provides a great opportunity to expand this forward-looking approach to healthcare innovation. By providing access to communities and local infrastructures, we will provide a platform for innovation to thrive and taking a health and wellness approach will help reduce the number of people who get sick in the first place.”

Orla Veale, Academic Health Science Campus Director at St. James’s Hospital, said:

Healthcare is changing rapidly and moving to a more preventative model that considers the wider determinants of health, outside of the traditional boundaries of the hospital environment. To address these challenges and realise opportunities for the Irish healthcare system, it needs to be a collaborative endeavour. St. James’s Hospital are delighted to continue our participation in Smart D8 and look forward to seeing the continued impact for the public.”

Jamie Cudden, Smart City Lead at Dublin City Council, said:

“The Smart D8 partnership is a unique collaboration that cuts across 12 public, private and academic partners who are backing these pilot calls with access to funding, expertise, know- how and wider organisational supports. Dublin City Council through our Smart Dublin initiative are excited to be supporting this pilot call which has such potential to bring innovative ideas and solutions to the Dublin 8 area.”

The lead partners are joined in the Smart D8 consortium by the Guinness Enterprise Centre, HSE Digital Transformation, Tyndall National Institute, St Patrick’s Mental Health Services, Trinity College Dublin Research & Innovation, Trinity Translational Medicine Institute, National College of Art & Design, and Health Innovation Hub Ireland.

Applicants can apply here at https://smartdublin.ie/smart-districts/smart-d8/

Smart D8 ‘Bee 8’ Pilot Connects Bees and Data

Smart D8 is pushing boundaries through innovative approaches to bees and data.

Bee8 is a community-driven social enterprise supported by The Digital HubNational College of Art and DesignSt. Patrick’s Mental Health Services and Tyndall National Institute. The project is developing a link between society, nature and wellbeing using bees and data. By integrating sensors into beehive sites, the health of the bees, local air quality and CO2 levels offer local residents and the hive managers insights into Dublin 8’s biodiversity.

 

Impact

By January 2023, Bee 8 :

  • Integrated 22 sensors into over 60 beehive sites
  • Provided insights into a sustainable model for community-led bee keeping and honey production at scale
  • Generated a diversity of online material to promote health, wellbeing and environmental sustainability

To keep updated on the plan and progress of the Bee8 project please visit bee8.ie

If you would like to learn hear more about the project or get involved please contact info@smartd8.ie.

Smart D8 Civic Dollars Parks Pilot

Smart D8 has launched its largest pilot project to date with the introduction of a new ‘Civic Dollars’ community currency to encourage use of public parks and drive better health outcomes for the community.

The project, led by Dublin City Council, will use a smartphone app to reward visitors with the new Civic Dollars for spending time in participating Dublin 8 parks, which can then be exchanged for goods and services from local businesses or gifted to local community organisations.

Civic Dollars is the brainchild of Moai Digital founder Stephen McPeake and has already been successfully rolled out in Belfast. Over 3,000 hours of activity have been registered in participating Belfast parks, with 1,530 Civic Dollars redeemed and 1,043 donated to community groups.

 

Project Activities

Companies participating in Civic Dollars by offering direct rewards to users include Epic Ireland, The Bike Hub, Mobility Genie, Little Bird Café, Adonis Flower Designers, Bite of Life Café and CBRE Ireland. In addition, users can gift their Civic Dollars to participating community groups and organisations who can exchange these for a range of useful services such as marketing advice, IT consultations, legal consultations, and graphic design work. Participating companies include VAVA Influencers, Little Bird Yoga, Core Tech IT, Paul Saxon Consulting, and Éire Graphic Design.

Community groups participating in Civic Dollars include Warrenmount Community Education Centre near Newmarket, Robert Emmet CDP who supports communities around Bridgefoot Street and Oliver Bond House, Solas Project which has a range of programmes focused on skills for young people, Fatima Groups United, which supports the community of Fatima and Herberton, Focus Ireland, Common Ground, 61st Merchant’s Quay Scouts and Shannon’s HopeLine.

9 parks in Dublin 8 are participating in the pilot: St Audoen’s Park, St Patrick’s Park, Weaver Park, Oscar Square in The Liberties, Grattan Park in Inchicore, The Memorial Gardens, Grand Canal, Turvey Park and St James Linear Park. Some of the parks have seen recent investment by Dublin City Council who aims to roll the scheme out to other parks under its control if it is a success. The Civic Dollars pilot will run for 5 months, and the team are hoping to attract 1,000 users in the first 2 months.

The app does not measure steps or distance that the users accumulate in the park, just the time spent in a zone, ensuing that users with mobility or health issues are not discriminated against and can participate fully.

Lord Mayor of Dublin Alison Gilliland said:

“Dublin’s parks are an asset to the city, and during the pandemic many Dubliners have realised the importance of access to green space for recreation and leisure. We need to encourage increased use of our parks, and the Civic Dollars project will do that while having the added benefit of contributing to local businesses and community organisations. Civic Dollars and the wider Smart D8 project are prime examples of community-focused innovation which will improve the health and wellbeing of our citizens.”

The technology used for Civic Dollars is non-invasive and privacy-friendly, by only using GPS data and allowing users to opt in once they enter a park. Data is anonymised, and a user’s session will end automatically once they walk out of the park geo-fence. Data gathered will be used by Dublin City Council to analyse park usage and allow for future planning and infrastructure improvements.

Impact

The project goal is to decrease health inequality and help citizens who are not currently active to take part and improve their wellbeing. Since the launch of Civic Dollars, the app has encouraged people to spend more time in parks in Dublin 8. It has also encouraged 43% of people to donate their civic dollars to local charities and community groups. The app has also allowed app users to report issues found around the various parks.

By March 2022, we reported

  • 1,185 app users
  • 1,509 hours of park activity generated
  • 3 issues reported

For more information on Civic Dollars click here.

If you would like to learn hear more about the project or get involved please contact info@smartd8.ie.

Smart D8 Launches Way to Wellbeing

Ways to Wellbeing initiative launched to foster Positive Mental Health

Wellbeing initiative to focus on fostering positive mental health and connections among young and older persons

A new intergenerational project, Ways to Wellbeing, which aims to foster local connections and encourage students to learn about wellbeing and mental health from older persons in their community, has launched a pilot phase across six schools in the Dublin 8 area.

Ways to Wellbeing is a project by Walk in My Shoes, the flagship awareness-raising campaign of St Patrick’s Mental Health Services, and was produced in collaboration with Smart D8, an initiative that aims to improve the health and wellbeing of citizens in Dublin 8.

Launching on 1 October to coincide with International Day for Older Persons, the project is tailored towards primary and secondary school students and aims to promote positive mental health, wellbeing, and learning through the facilitation of meaningful and rewarding conversations between young and older persons in the community.

Through participating in the project, students will seek to learn the following from the older population in their community:

  • Ways to build and maintain wellbeing
  • How to build resilience
  • An important lesson that made a positive difference to their life.

The pilot phase of the initiative, which will see 306 students taking part, invites participants to interview family members from the Dublin 8 area; write letters to day centres or nursing homes; and utilise a range of mediums, such as podcasts, written stories, film or photography, to create engaging projects that showcase the connections between young and old, and what the students have learned.

To help them get started with their projects, all students, and their teachers, received a Ways to Wellbeing Project Information Pack outlining all the various approaches they can take.

The schools taking part are:

  • Scoil Treasa Naofa,Donore Avenue
  • Griffith Barracks MDS , South Circular Road
  • Scoil Mhuire gan Smál , Inchicore
  • St Enda’s Primary School, Whitefriar Street
  • Presentation Secondary School Warrenmount
  • Christian Brothers Secondary School Synge Street.

Amanda McArdle, Campaign Manager of Walk in My Shoes said: “Walk in My Shoes is delighted to collaborate with Smart D8 to launch this exciting and innovative new project on a pilot basis across schools in the Dublin 8 community. Ways to Wellbeing is an opportunity for younger people to learn about wellbeing and resilience from the diverse experience and expertise of older people, while also promoting positive mental health in the older population through connectivity and inclusion.”

Orla Veale, Lead at Smart D8 said: “Smart D8 is proud to partner with Walk in My Shoes and St Patrick’s Mental Health Services on the Ways to Wellbeing project. We are excited to see how this intergenerational initiative will impact positive mental health and wellbeing within the local community.”

At the end of the pilot, all students’ projects will be added to the Walk in My Shoes School Portal, an online platform that enables school staff to highlight and share what they are doing in their schools, classrooms, and communities to promote positive mental health and wellbeing. A number of winning projects will then be selected and displayed in an exhibition and digital display in St Patrick’s University Hospital, and Dublin 8 over January and February 2022.

Following on from the roll-out of the pilot project in Dublin 8, it is hoped that the initiative will launch in schools across Ireland from early in 2022.

For more information on Ways to Wellbeing click here.

Smart D8 Launches Heart of our City

  • Research shows 1 in 4 Dublin 8 residents avail of cardiovascular health services & have difficulty taking medication at the correct time.
  • Heart of our City aims to reduce the rate of unplanned cardiovascular hospital admissions by connecting people with a range of resources to support their heart health including social prescribing initiatives.
  • Heart of our City is a Smart D8 pilot project in partnership with the Irish Heart Foundation and Novartis.

Heart of our City – a new pilot project is a population health program focused on improving heart health in Dublin 8 – has been launched today.

Smart D8 conducted local community research earlier this year and heart health was identified as an area of concern for local citizens with 23% of respondents advising they would like more support and information.

The Heart of our City programme is a collaboration by the Irish Heart Foundation, Smart D8 and Novartis. The project is also working with the Dublin 8 community, St James’s Hospital, ExWell Medical and Fatima Groups United.

This pilot project will connect people in Dublin 8 with a range of existing resources to support their cardiovascular health, building on existing social prescribing initiatives in the locality.

The Heart of our City project is aiming to improve heart health that will result in a reduced burden on local health services and reduce unplanned hospitalisations. In addition, the overall health and wellbeing of citizens will improve. The hope is that the model and learnings from this project can also be applied to other chronic diseases in the future.

Commenting on the launch, Dr. Angie Brown, Medical Director with the Irish Heart Foundation, said:

“We are really pleased to have the opportunity to work with Novartis and Smart D8 on this innovative project focused on the local community in Dublin 8. Heart disease and stroke have a devastating impact on families across Ireland and we know that 80% of this is preventable. A key challenge is in empowering people to make the changes they need to lead healthier lives and that is the focus of this project.”

Audrey Derveloy, General Manager Ireland, Novartis Ireland, said:

“Novartis are proud to partner with Smart D8 and the Irish Heart Foundation on this project.  With the healthcare challenges and inequalities exacerbated by the pandemic, it is even more important for organisations to partner on preventive healthcare approaches like Heart of our City. This is a critical time for us to explore how we can pivot away from simply treating disease, to instead collaboration and prevention.

Orla Veale, Project Lead, Smart D8, said:

“Smart D8 is delighted to collaborate with the Irish Heart Foundation and Novartis on the Heart of our City project that is responding directly to the needs of the community. Smart D8 aims to transforms the health and wellbeing of citizens, and this project will make a real impact.”

Find out more about the Heart of our City project at www.irishheart.ie/heartofourcity

Smart D8 Announces First Pilot Call Selections Focused on Population Health & Mental Health

Smart D8 announces first pilot call selections focused on Population Health & Mental Health

Smart D8 is a collaborative initiative to improve the health and wellbeing of citizens in Dublin 8 through innovation.

Bringing together public authorities, academia, healthcare, citizens and industry, Smart D8 applies a people-centred approach, with the engagement and active participation of the local community at its core. In late 2020, the first Smart D8 Community Survey was launched, capturing the needs and priorities of the local community

In response to this survey, our first call for pilots was launched in March 2021 and we are delighted to announce the selected pilots that will be implemented in Autumn 2021.

Category: Population Health 

Heart of our City 

In partnership with the Irish Heart Foundation and Novartis, Heart of our City is a population health program that will focus on heart health in Dublin 8.  This pilot project will connect people in Dublin 8 with a range of resources to support their cardiovascular health, building on existing social prescribing initiatives in the locality.

Social Currency Community Platform  

Civic Dollars is a social currency platform that is used by citizens to improve health through physical activity and also supports connection with their local community.

This pilot will allow people to earn rewards for time spent in local parks and open spaces.

Category: Mental Health

Ways to Wellbeing: Learning from Locals

In partnership with St.Patrick’s Mental Health Services, Ways to Wellbeing is a project that will support students in learning about mental health and wellbeing through engaging with the lives of the older community in Dublin 8.   The project is designed for students of both primary and secondary schools in the locality.

Virtual Reality Meditation Platform 

In partnership with SolasVR,  this project will pilot a Virtual Reality Meditation platform in the community.  SolasVR enables a micro-break to allow the users to create some time and space away from events or situations that are impacting them.

Mental Health Literacy 

The aim of this pilot project is to address the health literacy and digital health literacy challenges faced by adults with mental health needs. The aim of this proposal is to co-design solutions with people engaging in mental health services that will empower them in their treatment and decision-making.

 

Pilot Call 2

Thank you to all the organisations and people who applied for our first pilot call.  The next pilot call will be in November 2021 and the focus categories will be Population Health and Positive & Healthy Ageing. If you have any questions, please email info@smartd8.ie.

ADAPT & Smart D8 Citizens’ Think-In to Discuss “What Is My Health Information?”

ADAPT, the SFI research centre for AI-Driven Content Technology and Smart D8 invite you to an online public conversation, a Citizens’ Think-In to discuss

“What is My Health Information?” with guest speaker, Orla Gogarty from St Patrick’s Mental Health Services.

We now have numerous personal devices which can record our fitness and wellbeing from our heartbeat to our sleep patterns. As a result of this technology, we can take more control over our own health management. As a result, the concept of health information is evolving.

To explore this, ADAPT & Smart D8 invite the public to join a conversation on: ‘What is my health information?’

The topic will be introduced by Orla Gogarty, Director of Digital Health, Transformation and Partnerships at St Patricks Mental Health Services (SPMHS). Orla’s talk will explore:

  • What does Health Information look like in the 21st Century and why is it important to us as citizens?
  • How can digital technologies empower us to manage our health and reorient our health services to be more inclusive, people-centred and efficient?

During the event, you will be asked to consider questions like:

Have you ever considered which information in your health record belongs to you?

Should data collected on smart devices such as phone apps and wearable technologies, be part of my health information?

The Think-In takes place online on 7 July 2021 from 4.00 – 5.45pm

Event outline:

  • Short presentation to introduce the topic
  • Small-group discussion of scenarios, focusing on which information in your health record belongs to you and how the information is created and accessed
  • Each group reports back with thoughts
  • Whole group reflection and deliberation

What will I do during the Think-In?During the Think-In, you will be invited to join Zoom breakout groups. You don’t need to have any expertise the area – we will provide all the information you need and we are interested in hearing opinions from everyone.

Speaker Bio:

Orla Gogarty is Director of Digital Health, Transformation, and Partnerships at St Patricks Mental Health Services (SPMHS) with executive responsibility for data protection. Orla has over 35 years experience in healthcare as a senior executive, programme manager, academic, and clinician in the UK, Canada, and Ireland and across the public and private sectors. She has successfully delivered numerous complex strategic transformational programmes in Healthcare including leading the digital transformation programme at SPMHS over a five-year period. This included the implementation of Ireland’s first electronic health record (EHR) in 2017, an integrated Patient Billing System in 2019, the introduction of proven video technology at scale in March 2020 to support SPMHS’s seamless transition to virtual mental health service model necessitated by Covid and finally the rapid deployment of Ireland’s first integrated Patient Portal in June 2020 to provide services users with access to their mental health information. SPMHS’s uses a collaborative approach to the design of its digital health solutions working with cross functional teams and joint service user and clinical advisories to ensure the highest security, privacy and transparency standards for service users’ information.

ADAPT’s Citizens’ Think-Ins are public forums that bring people together to discuss some of the ethical issues we face in the digital age. Members of the public have an opportunity to interact with researchers at the cutting-edge of AI research and development. The Citizens’ Think-In project has been funded by Science Foundation Ireland.

About Smart D8

Smart D8 is an initiative to improve the health and wellbeing of citizens through collaboration and innovation: www.smartd8.ie

About St Patrick’s Mental Health Services

St Patrick’s Mental Health Services (SPMHS) has a vision for a society where all citizens are empowered and given the opportunity to live mentally healthy lives. St Patrick’s works to provide the highest quality mental healthcare, to promote mental wellbeing and mental health awareness, and to advocate for the rights of those experiencing mental health difficulties: https://www.stpatricks.ie/

To familiarise yourself with the ADAPT Citizens’ Think-In project, please watch this short introductory video https://youtu.be/uKoQP6IrxhY

Visit: https://thinkins.adaptcentre.ie/

Innovation Pathways and Prioritisation within Primary Healthcare

Smart D8 is delighted to partner with CALIN – Celtic Advanced Life Science Innovation Network and Wales Cancer Research Centre in supporting GPs on their innovation journey. The 4 part CPD series – Innovation Pathways and Prioritisation within Primary Healthcare -will commence on the 16th of June 2021. A series of four workshops designed to introduce the process for identifying innovation pathways & prioritisation within primary healthcare.

About This Event

Innovation Pathways and Prioritisation within Primary Healthcare: 4-Part Series CPD
You are invited to join our series of four workshops designed to introduce the process for identifying innovation pathways & prioritisation within primary healthcare. The Celtic Advanced Life Science Innovation Network (CALIN) is hosting this free virtual series in collaboration with the Welsh Cancer Research Centre (WCRC) and the Dublin Smart D8 Programme.
When: Wednesdays on 16th, 23rd & 30th June and 7th July 2021

Time: 2:30pm – 4:30pm, BST

Who: General Practitioners / Practice Managers of SME Primary Healthcare Practices

Register your interest for our free virtual series here.

If participants are eligible (see below) for this 4-part event, they will need to join each of the four live sessions and participate to be awarded a certificate acknowledging their attendance and recognising the accumulation of 8 hours of CPD.
For Irish General Practitioners we have applied for CPD Recognition with the Irish College of General Practitioners (ICGP) for this event series. For all others, the certificate can serve as support towards your personal learning records.

Background

The COVID-19 pandemic has driven a digital health evolution across healthcare, highlighting the potential for innovations within primary healthcare that could create long-term impacts for patient health and service efficiency. However, prioritising which innovations to invest time and money in and navigating the innovation pathway is a challenging prospect.

Aim

Comprising of 4 sessions of 2-hours each over a four-week period, you will explore how to assess the patient needs that will benefit most from innovation, how to prioritise your efforts for maximum output, and how to build the best solution for your practice. You will learn techniques to help define outputs and measures, and to build a development action plan. You will have the opportunity to work with industry experts and development specialists. The aim is to provide an innovation process to primary healthcare practices that will enable you to prioritise digital innovations and engage with support mechanisms within Wales and/or Ireland to progress innovations to implementation.

Eligibility

Register your interest for this event to attend the whole series, and we will check your eligibility based on the following criteria:
• Your Primary Healthcare Practice will need to be an SME.
• Only one representative from the practice can attend, due to a restriction in participant numbers.
• The practice is located in one of the following regions of Ireland or Wales:
Specialist Innovation Speaker and Workshop Format
Over the course of 4 weeks, the 2-hour sessions will be split to include a guest speaker who will address some key aspects of the healthcare digital innovation landscape in Wales and/or Ireland. Sessions will be followed by an interactive workshop hosted by Chris James from Business Partners, who will take you step by step through the innovation pathways for Primary Healthcare, and assisting you in creating a tailored innovation-decision model for your practice:

Part 1: Understanding the Innovation Process
Part 2: Planning for Innovation
Part 3: Implementing Innovation
Part 4: Bringing Innovation to Wales and Ireland

The workshops will address the issues, challenges and processes associated with innovation pathways within Primary Healthcare, through individual exercises and group activities with discussions in break out rooms. An electronic workbook will be provided to each participant, which will align with the content and activities within the workshops. It will also provide opportunities for discussion and Q&A, whilst building working relationships with health professionals, business innovation experts, and key people within the Welsh and Irish digital innovation landscape.

Workshop Host – CALIN

This free series of workshops are hosted by CALIN, an advanced life science network connecting business, academia and healthcare with experts from six leading universities across Ireland and Wales. CALIN provides an opportunity to engage with leaders in advanced medical and pharmaceutical science, nanotechnology and biotechnology. The network opens access to technology, scientific expertise, and a network of life science innovators to support the development of products, processes and services.
The Celtic Advanced Life Science Innovation Network (CALIN) is an Ireland-Wales INTERREG operation funded by the European Regional Development Fund through the Welsh Government.
CALIN Innovation Pathways and Prioritisation within Primary Healthcare: Speaker Biographies

Switching to the Circular Economy: Modos Training for D8 Businesses

Switching to the Circular Economy: Modos Training for D8 Businesses


MODOS is a circular economy training programme for micro, small and medium size enterprises developed for Dublin City Council and the Waste Management Plan Lead Authority (WMPLA). The Digital Hub is now teaming up with Dublin City Council to deliver MODOS training for businesses in Dublin 8 in June 2021.

The programme will be delivered virtually. The trainers will make each session interactive with a mix of presentations, best practice case studies, exercises, and discussion to help participants apply the learning to their business.

What is the circular economy?

Our current economic model is based on a linear ‘take-make-waste’ approach, which is costly for businesses and bad for the environment. By contrast, a circular economy is efficient and environmentally sustainable. In a circular economy, products, components and materials are kept in use for as long as possible. Supply and production chains operate in ‘closed-loops’ making them less wasteful and more resilient. New business models based around leasing, re-manufacturing, recycling, and upcycling become possible, saving businesses money and reducing environmental impacts.

Adopting circular economy principles can help your business:

  • Save money, reduce waste, and increase resilience
  • Boost competitive advantage and brand reputation
  • Unlock new business opportunities that also help the environment

Who is this training programme suitable for?

MODOS is suitable for all businesses but is particularly relevant for those from the following sectors: construction and the built environment, food, retail, manufacturing, textiles and fashion, electronics, plastics, and packaging.

Dublin MODOS Programme Schedule

Below are the dates and times of the MODOS Training for D8 Businesses:

  • Circular Economy 101 – Tuesday 1st June from 9.30 to 13.30
  • CE in your supply chain – Tuesday 8th June from 9.30 to 13.30
  • CE in your operations – Tuesday 15th June from 9.30 to 13.30
  • CE and customer engagement – Tuesday 22nd June from 9.30 to 13.30
  • Close-out (1-hour wrap up) – Tuesday 29th June from 9.30 to 10.30

Following the training session, the trainers provide a 1-hour face-to-face mentoring with participants to discuss the learning outcomes and how they might be applied to their business.

Cost: A nominal fee will be charged for each module to ensure participants value the training and to go towards the cost of running the programme. The cost is €75 for all 4 modules, payable when businesses book their place.

How to Apply: Please complete and return the Application Form to register your interest.

FAQs: Here are some of the Questions & Answers on the programme.

For any other enquiries or questions about the MODOS Dublin 8 programme, please contact cviguier@thedigitalhub.com