In this episode, Mitch Belkin and Daniel Belkin speak with Daniel Burka about his work at Resolve to Save Lives and the project Simple.org, a hypertension reduction application. They discuss the importance of iterative building processes that trial various ideas and then quantifiably measure success. Daniel Burka stresses the importance of understanding the goals of all users–physicians, patients, public healthcare experts–when designing successful healthcare applications.
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Who is Daniel Burka?
Daniel Burka is the director of product and design at Resolve To Save Lives, where he works on the web-based, open-source hypertension reduction application Simple.org. Previously, he was a Design Partner at Google Ventures, the Creative Director for Digg.com, and the Director of Design for Tiny Speck which later became Slack. Among many notable projects, he designed the Firefox logo and Mozilla’s website.
What is Resolve to Save Lives?
Resolve to Save Lives is an initiative to prevent 100 million cardiovascular deaths over the next 30 years. The initiative is funded by Bloomberg Philanthropies, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Gates Philanthropy Partners, and the Chan Zuckerberg Foundation. Methods to reduce deaths include hypertension reduction, trans fat elimination, and sodium reduction initiatives. In addition, Resolve to Save Lives aims to increase epidemic preparedness.
What is Simple.org?
Simple.org is a project of Resolve to Save Lives. It is an ultralight weight electronic health record system designed to manage patients with hypertension and diabetes. As of January 2022, 1.4 million patients in India, Bangladesh, and Ethiopia use the application.
What is DHIS2?
District Health Information Software 2 (DHIS2) is a free, open-source health management data platform. It was initially developed for three health districts in Cape Town, South Africa in 1998-99, but has since spread to more than 40 countries in Africa, Asia and Latin-America, as well as the EU. DHIS2 is used to aggregate statistical data collection, analysis, management, and visual presentation. It is completely web-based and has the ability to create analysis from live data in seconds. In addition, DHIS2 can be used to monitor patient health outcomes, improve disease surveillance, map disease outbreaks, and speed up health data access for health facilities and government organizations.