Medworks is a Pakistani digital healthcare startup
Medworks, a digital healthcare startup, aims to harness the power of technology to allow better management of non-communicable diseases. It turns an Android smartphone into a blood glucose measuring device.
The software plus all the data management and analytics are 100% Pakistani.
An external module, Glu-Sage, and its companion app lets you schedule and monitor glucose levels in the blood for diabetic patients. And while the device is quite small, its internal battery is strong and sturdy.
The system then stores the data within smartphones and on to a secure cloud server, from where it can be available to users on demand from any location on any device, using the internet.
The recorded data is vital to make needed changes in lifestyle, meal-plans and physical activities that help a diabetic patient live a healthy life.
Who are the creators?
Faisal Masood, the founder, shares how Medworks came to be. "During my masters in health policy [at London School of Economics and Political Science] a course on behavioural economics got me working on what we call ‘nudges’ in social theory — pushing people towards desirable behaviors by using certain levers like financial incentives, social encouragement, reminders or simplifying their choice set."
For Masood, the aim was to reduce the burden on healthcare providers and also deliver better patient outcomes. For example, if a user gets immediate feedback on how they should respond to a high or low glucose reading, they can take the necessary actions right away. In the long-run, these actions start paying off with regards to glucose control, and subsequently the patient's overall health.
Masood continues, "We are living in a data age, and the breakthroughs in data science are opening new possibilities that were not imaginable a few years ago."
With factors like general awareness, 4G availability, and more smartphone penetration, Medworks hopes to add to its skill-set and partner with companies in the future to offer cutting-edge solutions locally.
Read: 26pc of country’s population has type 2 diabetes: survey
How it works
1. Glu-Sage, the glucose meter