Health technology

Smartphone becomes doctor’s digital assistant

Engineers are working with doctors to develop wearable digital health technologies that can prevent and treat diseases at home, helping healthcare services reduce outpatient visits and readmissions.

Graphics: Mikkel Henssel

Facts

  • Stroke rehabilitation
    Recovering from a stroke traditionally requires many hospital visits. But with the help of new technologies, DTU is developing an app to help patients rehabilitate at home. This is done using a wearable exoskeleton that is controlled via signals from the brain. It can help the patient rehabilitate the arm, for example. Researchers are working to make rehabilitation more exciting by combining it with gamification.

    Using a headset, patients can pretend to sweep virtual dirt off the floor with a physical broom in hand. By imagining a physical activity like sweeping, patients’ motor nerves are stimulated, allowing them to faster regain their mobility and agility. This kind of active patient involvement—combined with direct physical feedback—brings motivation and satisfaction and creates an opportunity to improve the rehabilitation process.

  • Heart problems caught early
    Researchers and doctors from DTU and Bispebjerg and Frederiksberg Hospital want to gain a better understanding of how heart disease develops over time. In one study, data such as heart rate, sleep, stress, and pulse are collected using a heart rate sensor and an app installed on the patient’s smartphone.

    The data will be used to develop mathematical algorithms to detect heart problems at an early stage and start preventive treatment. The technology is also being developed in close collaboration with an innovative Danish start-up, where the technological solutions will be incorporated into their products.

Contact

Jakob Eyvind Bardram

Jakob Eyvind Bardram Head of Sections, Professor Department of Health Technology Phone: +45 45255311 Mobile: +45 25550446