Dallas Health Wildcatters CEO Launches Health Hacking Crisis Network to Put Community Skills and Ideas to Action – dallasinnovates.com

[Illustration: ARTQU/istockphoto]

Hubert Zajicek knows that we have a strong innovation community here in North Texas that can have an impactnot only locally, but globally. Zajicek, who runs Dallas-based accelerator Health Wildcatters, also believes we have to act fast to find solutions during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Zajicek, himself a trained physician, has started a new group called Health Hacking Crisis Network to share knowledge and actionable ideas. His goal is to connect like-minded people to facilitate collaboration and help coordinate an exchange of know-how in the current crisis.

This effort is about connecting the right people to make things happen if and when we need anything addressed, he says.

The new group, launched Thursday, welcomes physicians and health professionals, engineers, biomedical and others, medtech professionals, students, and business professionalsreally anyone who believes they can contribute, he says. And theres a particular need for those who have access to useful equipment in order to solve emergency healthcare issues quickly.

In just 24 hours, the group has pushed past more than 100 talented volunteers, Zajicek says. The first ideas are being worked on. The group was officially launched through the Health Wildcatters email list and its social media contacts.

Zajicek sees the Health Hacking Crisis Network as a group of people who can contribute their skills to solve problems, shortages, and come up with new solutions having to do with an acute situation.

Examples are like the Italian example of engineers sharing CAD files to build a critical part via 3D printing, he says. Many different skills are needed, from engineering to medicine (all subspecialties), from medical device expertise to statistics. Other skills could be in 3D rendering, 3D printing, but also bioengineering, biotechnology.

Early members of the group already include most of these fields, but were just at the beginning, he told Dallas Innovates via email.

We will want web-developers, coders, designers and folks who help us spread the word. It is the expressed goal to have a rapid reaction force and brain trust that we can call upon in times of crisis, just like now, he says. We are defining next steps as we speak to enable virtual meetings with speakers and discussions online.

To keep it simple, Zajicek says he decided to start the network on Facebook.

While the group was launched by Zajicek personally, he calls it a community effort. Health Wildcatters will support it with all the resources we have been blessed with.

Zajicek invitesencouragesothers to join him in the effort to build the resource network.

If you have an interest in contributing to solutions to the current crisis, join this group to meet and converse with like-minded people, he says. This effort is about connecting the right people to make things happen if/when we need anything addressed. Please share this group with anyone you know who is a doer, and has the right talents, training or access to provide help and solutions.

Go here to find out more.

Sign up to keep your eye on whats new and next in Dallas-Fort Worth, every day.

Health Wildcatters' third hackathonthe first focused on womenhosted more than 100 female innovators and entrepreneurs to create actionable solutions for problems in healthcare and life sciences.

The Plano-based remote patient monitoring startup is now offering providers a no-cost solution for low-risk patients or those with mild symptoms simply by answering a series of questions.

The concentration of headquarters, top universities, healthcare systems, and tech companies are key components to Dallas stature among the nations metro areas.

C1 Innovation Lab guides stakeholders from Dallas-area companies through immersive design sprints to find creative solutions for major challenges.

North Texas is one of the first metros to use a web-based information exchange to generate collaboration between the communitys healthcare and social sectors. Now the pioneering PCCI is sharing its solutions in a new playbook.

Continued here:
Dallas Health Wildcatters CEO Launches Health Hacking Crisis Network to Put Community Skills and Ideas to Action - dallasinnovates.com

Related Posts

Comments are closed.