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Exercise is Medicine

Exercise is Medicine

Exercise is Medicine

This week we focused on the value of physical activity to our overall state of wellness.  We were joined in studio by Dr. Felipe Lobelo of Emory University, Mike Tinney, of Fitness Interactive Experience, and JP Matzegheit, of Wahoo Fitness.  We talked about the physiologic importance of physical activity along with innovative technologies that facilitate inspiring people to get moving.

Physical inactivity now ranks as the 2nd leading cause of mortality in the world. However, too few health systems and health care providers include physical activity (PA) as part of the prevention and management of obesity and chronic diseases. For 5 years, the Exercise is Medicine (EIM) initiative of the American College of Sports Medicine has helped build local networks to support the systematic inclusion of PA in health care in the US and more than 40 countries in 5 continents via the “EIM Solution”, an evidence-based approach to assessing patients, prescribing appropriate PA and developing community-based PA resources linked to health services and public awareness. The

Large-scale implementation of the EIM Solution across different populations, settings and health care systems is a complex process. The EIM-GRCC serves as a coordinating center for EIM implementation projects by offering state-of –art consultation research and evaluation support, training, policy, cross-national networking and management dimensions of EIM programming to support the initiative.

Fitness Interactive Experience (FIX) has developed a tech platform that incorporates a video game-inspired approach to motivating people to walk and engage in brief periods of other physical activities.  FIX provides their application to businesses seeking to improve the health of their employees for use over 6-8 weeks as a fitness challenge.  The application uses the popular zombie theme to get the user to walk more each day.

The application interfaces with wearable fitness devices such as FitBit to track physical activity such as walking/running.  In order for their character to survive in the game they’ll have to walk while wearing their fitness device to “walk/run” their character to safe zones.  The early data from their initial challenges has shown promising statistics regarding the level of participation and engagement by employees using the application.

Wahoo Fitness produces a range of wearable fitness devices designed to give feedback on a variety of physical activities and bio data.  The sensors enable athletes to become more efficient runners, swimmers, and riders through the use of accelerometers in the sensors.  Additionally, users can train smarter by monitoring heart rate instead of subjective rating of perceived exertion (RPE).

Users are able to compare current training session against previous sessions to evaluate number of reps, cadence, and other training data.

Special Guests:

Dr. Felipe Lobelo, MD, PhD, Emory University, Global Health Department, Exercise is Medicine

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Exercise is Medicine

  • Associate Professor, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University
  • Previous Lead Epidemiologist, CDC
  • Doctor of Medicine, Universidad del Rosario
  • PhD Exercise Science, University of South Carolina, Columbia

Mike Tinney, CEO/Founder, Fitness Interactive Experience/ A Step Ahead Challenge

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Fitness Interactive Experience

  • Previous CEO, White Wolf
  • Former President, CCP America
  • Nearly 20 years of experience in the video gaming industry from developer to leadership roles

JP Matzigkeit, CEO/Founder of Wahoo Fitness  facebook_logo_small3  twitter_logo_small  linkedin_small1  youtube logo  google-plus-logo-red-265px  Pinterest-logo

JP Matzegheit

  • MBA, University of North Carolina, Kenan Flagler Business School
  • Previous Advisory Board Chair, Founder and President, Chastain Park Conservancy
  • Former AVP Compensation, Cox Enterprises
  • Avid cyclist

Pediatric Health Technologies

Pediatric Health Technologies

This week we had experts on the show talking about developments in Pediatric Health Technologies.  We were joined in studio by Leanne West, Principal Research Scientist at Georgia Tech Research Institute, and Paul Spearman, Chief Research Officer with Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta.  They came by to talk about the innovative collaboration between academic research institutions, Emory and Georgia Institute of Technology, that help accelerate the rate that important technologies can be made available to the pediatric patient population in need.  Carly Kiseleczynk, CEO/Founder of BrainChild Technologies also came by to talk about the intriguing technology that allows parents to have more interactive interaction with young infants through their pacifier-controlled device that interfaces and can control applications and toys through non-nutritional sucking patterns.

We discussed the goals of these important Atlanta research institutions of helping pediatric health providers to treat the unique needs of very young patients.  They have what they call a “Quick Wins” program where they engage with promising technology companies to help them bring their solutions to market within a very-fast 18 months.

Carly talked about how they were able to advance their work on developing an interactive technology that allows infants to learn how to control toys and tablet-based applications with their sucking patterns.  The infants are able to turn on a mobile or night light, or make remote-controlled toys move.  And they’re able to advance language skills through interacting with special tablet-based applications that can provide data on certain developmental milestones.

Both of these initiatives can benefit from financial support to allow them to hasten the pace of their research and make these helpful technologies available to pediatric patients in need sooner.

Special Guests:

Leanne West, Principal Research Scientist with Georgia Tech Research Institute  linkedin_small1

leanne

  • Education, Vanderbilt University
  • Former High School Physics Teacher
  • 17 years as Research Scientist Georgia Tech Research Institute
  • Recipient, 2014 Woman of the Year, Georgia Women In Technology

 

Paul Spearman, Chief Research Officer with Childrens Healthcare of Atlanta  linkedin_small1

Childrens Healthcare of Atlanta

  •  Doctor of Medicine, University of Texas Southwestern Medical School
  • Residency, Internal Medicine and Pediatrics, The Ohio State University
  • Residency, Infectious Disease, Washington University in St. Louis
  • Professor, Emory University School of Medicine

Carly Kiselyczynk, CEO/Founder, of BrainChild Technologies  linkedin_small1

BrainChild Technologies

  • PhD, Medical Sciences, Neurosciences, Karolinska Institutet
  • Published research author
  • Postdoctoral Fellow, Yale Depression Research Group
  • Recipient 2012 Ruth L. Kirchstein National Research Service Award

 

 

Intellimedix and Life University

HCS 11

 

Intellimedix and Life University

This week we sat down with experts from Intellimedix and Life University.  Intellimedix is an Atlanta-based company that uses high-powered computing algorithms, coupled with genetic testing to identify existing medications that could potentially be re-purposed to effectively treat illnesses other than the ones they were originally designed to treat.  One of the company’s founders has a child who suffers from a severe form of epilepsy.  Unfortunately, there are limited treatments known to be available that will provide relief from this debilitating condition. His daughter’s story influenced the decision to focus the company’s initial efforts on uncovering existing medications that could be successfully re-purposed to help folks dealing with this type of epilepsy and other neurologic disorders.

Chief Science Officer, Jeff Skolnick shared the example of how a blood pressure medication (Viagra) was re-purposed to treat erectile dysfunction.  He went on the discuss the physiology/chemistry behind why this is possible and why it makes sense to look for existing, approved medications that have the ability to improve quality of life for patients dealing with illnesses different from those the medications are initially intended to treat.  This approach saves a great deal of time and money over the years-long, massively-expensive process of developing a medication from ground zero to treat a particular condition; allowing patients in need to receive access to an effective treatment sooner.

Dr. Gilles LeMarche, VP of Professional Relations at Life University came by to talk about the undergraduate and graduate programs available at their Marietta, GA-based campus.  They offer a number of health, wellness, and sports-related degrees ranging from chiropractic medicine, to vitalistic nutrition, functional kinesiology, and others.  He shared their approach to wellness, applying the philosphy of “vitalism” allows their graduates to help their clients/patients by helping the body to heal itself; as it is ideally capable of doing when interfering factors are removed.

Special Guests:

Steven Hickson, CFO, Intellimedix  facebook_logo_small3  linkedin_small1

steven

  • MBA, Global Executive MBA Program, IESE Business School, Barcelona Spain
  • BA Accounting, NC State University
  • Previous Senior Auditor, Turner Broadcasting System
  • Former SVP, New Media & Premium Channels, Fox International Channels- Asia

Jeff Skolnick, PhD, Chief Science Officer, Intellimedix  linkedin_small1

Intellimedix

  • Director, Center for Study of Systems Biology, Georgia Institute of Technology
  • PhD, Chemistry, Yale University
  • Mary and Maisie Gibson Chair in Computational Systems Biology
  • Associate Director, Integrated Biosystems Institute, Georgia Institute of Technology

Gilles Lamarche, DCM, VP, Professional Relations, Life University  linkedin_small1  youtube-logo1  twitter_logo_small  smugmug LOGO  Pinterest LOGO   facebook_logo_small3

Life University

  • Doctor of Chiropractic Medicine, Canadian Memorial Chiropractic College
  • Certified Six Advisors Coach, 6 Advisors Coaching Academy
  • Former Vice President, Parker College of Chiropractic
  • Fluent in French

 

 

 

 

 

Some backing music provided by: www.pacdv.com/sounds/