The seven winners of the 2nd PI Awards Watch the video!
PATIENT INNOVATION CATEGORY
Michael Seres
with OSTOM-I Alert
Michael won the PI Award in the Patient category. He was diagnosed with Crohn’s disease. That is why he invented the Ostom-I Alert: a sensor-based device that can be attached to any ostomy bag and is able to send messages via Bluetooth to a mobile app to warn the patient when his bag is close to being full.
Read morePATIENT SERIAL INNOVATION CATEGORY
Giesbert Nijhuis
with Laesieworks
Giesbert won the PI Award in the Patient Serial Innovator category. Giesbert is a tetraplegic who created his own website, LaesieWorks, where he shares several solutions he created that help him coping with challenges he faces daily due to his condition.
Read moreCAREGIVER INNOVATION CATEGORY
David Day
with Cystic Fibrosis games
David won the PI Award in the Caregiver category. David Day’s daughter, Alicia, suffers from Cystic Fibrosis. David developed computer games which are played by using a device that connects breathing tubes to the computer, controlling characters and shapes on screen by exhaling at a certain pressure.
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Doron Somer
with Angelsense
Doron won the PI Award in the Caregiver category. Doron’s son, Itamar, is autistic and suffered mistreatment at the hands of a professional caregiver. So Doron invented Angelsense, a personal GPS device designed specifically to keep special needs children monitored.
Read moreCAREGIVER INNOVATION CATEGORY
Kenneth Shinozuka
with SafeWander
Kenneth won the PI Award in the Caregiver category. To prevent his grandfather, who suffers from Alzheimer’s disease, to wander alone at night, Kenneth created SafeWander: A wearable sensor designed to send an alert to a caregiver whenever a patient gets out of bed.
Read moreCOLLABORATOR INNOVATION CATEGORY
Pavel Kurbatsky
with Walking Talking Stick
Pavel won the PI Award in the Collaborator category. Having worked with disabled children, Pavel wanted to invent something to make their lives better. So he created a walking talking stick to help blind people navigate.
Read moreCOLLABORATOR INNOVATION CATEGORY
Duncan Fitzsimons
with Morph™ Wheels
Duncan won the PI Award in the Collaborator category. Having created foldable wheels for his bicycle, a man in a wheelchair made him realized disabled people would also benefit from his innovation if Duncan adapted that concept to wheelchairs.
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