Vecna Designs Mobile Health Systems for Rural Care

How do you design an electronic health records interface for people who are computer illiterate? And for use in locations where electricity is scarce?

Vecna Technologies, the Cambridge, MA-based healthcare IT and robotics company, is taking a crack at this problem with the Global Health Initiative, which it runs with the non-profit Vecna Cares Foundation. The business unit has developed a “CliniPAK,” which is essentially a mobile health record system with servers and solar chargers in tow. (It attracted the attention of many a geek at Cambridge’s Voltage coffee shop, where I met with the CliniPAK crew).

“What we really try to do with CliniPAK was to be thinking long-term and thinking sustainable,” says Emily Wang, CliniPAK’s project manager. “We built a technology infrastructure from the ground up, that’s not disease-specific and not one app. We look at a patient’s health holistically.”

The CliniPAK system has an AC port for charging and electricity, as well as a docking station and USB port for connecting to a mobile tablet that offers a simple, online medical record system. The tablet interface helps “strip appointments down to a really simple workflow,” says Wang.

Doctors can look up existing patient records in the system by entering demographic information. The touch-screen interface shows questions that would guide a typical primary care appointment, asking patients things like why they came to the doctor that day, what types of symptoms they’re experiencing, and what other conditions they’re experiencing alongside those. The questions ultimately guide doctors to screens with dropdown menus for diagnoses and treatment options for each diagnosis. It can be customized for specific medical missions trips, tailored to the diagnoses one would expect to see in a certain country, Wang says. The CliniPAK tracks patient information and history across multiple appointments and demographics, and streamlines the previous manual paper-based process for doctors reporting population health data to the government, Wang says.

“The work was normally done on very big paper registers, and was a cumbersome process,” she says. “On top of that, the biggest time sink was at the end of month when [doctors] needed to generate reports.”

Vecna Cares first brought the technology to

Author: Erin Kutz

Erin Kutz has a background in covering business, politics and general news. She holds a bachelor’s degree in journalism from Boston University. Erin previously worked in the Boston bureau of Reuters, where she wrote articles on the investment management and mutual fund industries. While in college, she researched for USA Today reporter Jayne O’Donnell’s book, Gen Buy: How Tweens, Teens and Twenty-Somethings Are Revolutionizing Retail. She also spent a semester in Washington, DC, reporting Capitol Hill stories as a correspondent for two Connecticut newspapers and interning in the Money section of USA Today, where she assisted with coverage on the retail and small business beats. Erin got her first taste of reporting at Boston University’s independent student newspaper, as a city section reporter and fact checker and editor of the paper’s weekly business section.