Connected devices for health and healthcare have been proliferating at a very high rate for the past decade. Disseminating actionable data, in real time or near real time, in a way patients and providers can understand can define value in healthcare, where value equals outcome divided by costs. Nobody likes visiting the hospital, but that’s often where we have to take our children to monitor their health or to deliver treatment. Georgia Tech’s Institute for People and Technology leads the development of sensors, devices, and systems used outside of the medical office – in clothes, cars, homes, and other environments in which kids live. The Georgia Tech Pediatric Innovation Network develops mobile health technologies that allow doctors to diagnose and monitor their pediatric patients in their own home or on the go.
Projects
A snapshot of active and recent projects supporting pediatric innovation. Click a project to view details.
Featured projects
AI-Assisted Rehab Monitoring
Tracking recovery trends with lightweight models and clinician-reviewed signals.
Wearable Sensor Validation Study
Testing reliability, comfort, and data quality of wrist and ankle sensors in kids.
Clinic-to-Home Telemetry Trial
A feasibility study for continuous monitoring outside the clinic.
Remote Patient Data Platform
Secure pipeline for collecting and reviewing at-home measurements.
VR Therapy Engagement Study
Measuring adherence and engagement with guided VR therapy sessions.
Outcomes Dashboard & Reporting
A shared view of metrics to support program evaluation and reporting.