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Health Data is Medicine - CEO & Co-Founder of Seqster, Ardy Arianpour
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Manage episode 327709666 series 2842356
In a world where companies like Meta, Google, and Apple collect and benefit from vast amounts of data about you, what would it be like if you were in control of your data instead? Specifically, what would it be like if you were in control of your health data? And what if you had it all in one easy to access place?
CEO and Co-Founder Ardy Arianpour came on the podcast to tell Dave Anderson how and why Seqster is giving people that kind of control over their own health data. Adry says patient-centric data interoperability is healthcare’s biggest challenge and it’s his number one mission.
Seqster is a technology company working to break down the silos within the world of healthcare and make health data interoperability easy and universal.
Making Health Data Interoperable
Data is the gold of the twenty-first century. But interoperability of data is the moonshot. It’s not enough to collect the data, it also needs to be accessible and usable, and it turns out interoperability is hard to do. Ardy says that Seqster is the first company to make the idea work.
Dave asks why interoperability is so hard to do. It’s because lab data is different from wearable data, which is different from data from your doctor, which is different from data from your dentist, and so on. All your data needs to be extracted and keyed in such a way it can be cross referenced.
But putting it all together isn't enough. You must also think about the patient’s experience.
“How do you connect the dots quickly and how do you visualize this data?"
The data needs to be easy for both patients and providers to access and read.
"What are they going to do with my data?”
You're already giving your doctor and other providers access to your data. But you’re not really in control of it from that point on. This year, the U.S. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services interoperability rules stated that every single patient must have access to their healthcare data. Seqster wants to put the patient in control.
Dave follows up by asking what is being done with all this data? Who is using it and how?
It’s mostly clinical and decentralized trials, Ardy says. By using these data sets, both the cost and the time required to complete trials and develop new pharmaceuticals and therapies are vastly reduced.
Imagine what happens when you can collect a million patients’ data in an hour versus 18 months and then look at them all in one place? Ardy says we get more accurate information which results in better and faster development of new medicines and vaccines. Breaking down the silos that contain health data allows for a bigger picture of health for all of us.
With enough data, from enough patients, and with the right funding, Ardy thinks cancer is a problem we can solve. Dave wonders if health data could be like being an organ donor. Could we mark a box on a form and agree to donate our health data to science after our deaths?
Listen to this episode to learn more about:
- The problems around siloed health data and his solution
- How to address privacy concerns around healthcare data
- Ardy’s personal journey that brought him to this field
- Why Big Pharma isn't evil
- Bill Gates's advice to Ardy on getting Seqster to scale
- The decade of biological revolution
- The business model to make this work
69 episoade
Fetch error
Hmmm there seems to be a problem fetching this series right now. Last successful fetch was on February 26, 2024 14:53 ()
What now? This series will be checked again in the next day. If you believe it should be working, please verify the publisher's feed link below is valid and includes actual episode links. You can contact support to request the feed be immediately fetched.
Manage episode 327709666 series 2842356
In a world where companies like Meta, Google, and Apple collect and benefit from vast amounts of data about you, what would it be like if you were in control of your data instead? Specifically, what would it be like if you were in control of your health data? And what if you had it all in one easy to access place?
CEO and Co-Founder Ardy Arianpour came on the podcast to tell Dave Anderson how and why Seqster is giving people that kind of control over their own health data. Adry says patient-centric data interoperability is healthcare’s biggest challenge and it’s his number one mission.
Seqster is a technology company working to break down the silos within the world of healthcare and make health data interoperability easy and universal.
Making Health Data Interoperable
Data is the gold of the twenty-first century. But interoperability of data is the moonshot. It’s not enough to collect the data, it also needs to be accessible and usable, and it turns out interoperability is hard to do. Ardy says that Seqster is the first company to make the idea work.
Dave asks why interoperability is so hard to do. It’s because lab data is different from wearable data, which is different from data from your doctor, which is different from data from your dentist, and so on. All your data needs to be extracted and keyed in such a way it can be cross referenced.
But putting it all together isn't enough. You must also think about the patient’s experience.
“How do you connect the dots quickly and how do you visualize this data?"
The data needs to be easy for both patients and providers to access and read.
"What are they going to do with my data?”
You're already giving your doctor and other providers access to your data. But you’re not really in control of it from that point on. This year, the U.S. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services interoperability rules stated that every single patient must have access to their healthcare data. Seqster wants to put the patient in control.
Dave follows up by asking what is being done with all this data? Who is using it and how?
It’s mostly clinical and decentralized trials, Ardy says. By using these data sets, both the cost and the time required to complete trials and develop new pharmaceuticals and therapies are vastly reduced.
Imagine what happens when you can collect a million patients’ data in an hour versus 18 months and then look at them all in one place? Ardy says we get more accurate information which results in better and faster development of new medicines and vaccines. Breaking down the silos that contain health data allows for a bigger picture of health for all of us.
With enough data, from enough patients, and with the right funding, Ardy thinks cancer is a problem we can solve. Dave wonders if health data could be like being an organ donor. Could we mark a box on a form and agree to donate our health data to science after our deaths?
Listen to this episode to learn more about:
- The problems around siloed health data and his solution
- How to address privacy concerns around healthcare data
- Ardy’s personal journey that brought him to this field
- Why Big Pharma isn't evil
- Bill Gates's advice to Ardy on getting Seqster to scale
- The decade of biological revolution
- The business model to make this work
69 episoade
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