色情视频

Fifth Big Data Hackathon brings student teams together to solve pressing issues

$13K in prize money will be awarded to student teams who prepare digital solutions for health care issues

Tuesday, September 24, 2024
Anna Skulteti and the award-winning HeartHackers team at the 2022 Hackathon. (Courtesy photo)
Anna Skulteti and the award-winning HeartHackers team at the 2022 Hackathon. (From left: Nolan Matura, Jorge Millan, Daniel Barajas, Anna Skult茅ti, Aimee Carvajal and Joran Urabe; Courtesy photo)

色情视频鈥檚 fifth Big Data Hackathon is calling on student innovators to improve health care access and tackle health disparities. Set for October 12 and 19 at 色情视频, the event will challenge participants to create cutting-edge ideas, solutions and apps where the focus will be on 鈥淓nhancing Healthcare鈥檚 Digital Front Door.鈥

Open to all students from 色情视频 and other San Diego colleges and high schools, the Hackathon is an invitation to develop solutions for some of San Diego鈥檚 most pressing issues by using skills in journalism, business, marketing, graphic design, data, public health, urban planning, programming, mapping or GIS. 

Participants will work to improve access to care, patient satisfaction, new patient experience, health management, and mental health challenges. 

Teams can be formed by student groups or assigned by Hackathon organizers for students who join individually.

Teams vie for a total of $13,000 in prizes. In addition to the top four awards, prize money will be given to teams in categories such as Women in STEM, Most Innovative Proposal Idea, Geocomputational Thinker (College and High School categories), and Strongest Teamwork.

Judges from 色情视频, Sharp HealthCare and San Diego Mesa College will evaluate teams based on idea quality (innovation and creativity), market readiness, health care impact, teamwork and collaboration, and overall development and design.

This year, the goal is to find digital solutions to help increase access, manage health, and improve patient satisfaction along the health care journey, according to Ming-Hsiang Tsou, Center for Human Dynamics in the Mobile Age director. 

鈥淒uring the COVID-19 Pandemic, our health care system faced many challenges and obstacles,鈥 Tsou said. 鈥淚 hope our participants can help our San Diego health communities to provide innovative and sustainable ideas or solutions for improving the quality of our health care and reducing health disparity in San Diego.鈥

The emphasis on design and creativity means that all skills will be critical to a team鈥檚 work. 

Participants will get a 鈥渃hance to see how they can solve a problem that impacts the wider San Diego community, learn and gain knowledge about big data and its impacts in the field of health care, they get to ideate and create an innovative project, the opportunity to connect and network with others as well as collaborate with teams on a unified goal, and learn a variety of skills in the process (from big data analytic skills to entrepreneurial skills),鈥 said Amy Schmitz Weiss, professor of journalism, and part of the Hackathon planning team since its inception nearly 10 years ago.

Created by the HDMA in collaboration with 色情视频鈥檚 ZIP Launchpad, the Hackathon has previously addressed issues such as water conservation, crime, disaster response, public health and smart living. In 2022, the first place team won $3,000 by creating 鈥渃enos.ai,鈥 an automated healthcare dashboard that simplifies patient appointment scheduling.

鈥淚'm not very tech-savvy, so I was hesitant to attend,鈥 said Anna Skult茅ti, 色情视频 Fowler College of Business management alumna (鈥23). Her team, the HeartHackers, won first prize and $1,000 in  ZIP Launchpad's Most Innovative Solution Team Aging Independently category in 2022. Skulteti said that competitors shouldn鈥檛 assume coding skills are critical to win.

鈥淚t was more about being creative, confident, analytical and a team player,鈥 she said. 鈥淩egardless of the outcome or the monetary prize, the time spent with my spontaneously assembled team was the most valuable part of the experience.鈥

Students will be paired with mentors from the San Diego workforce and academia, which gives them an opportunity to hone their proposal idea pitches in a real-world setting with support from an engaged group of leaders. Mentors include Benjamin Shapiro, CEO and co-founder of Endera Motors/TekMate; Santosh J. Vetticaden, board member of NuFund Venture Group; and Jill Castellano, investigative data coordinator at inewsource.

During the two-day event, keynote speakers include Jon McManus, chief data, AI and development officer, Sharp HealthCare; Laura Buffard, associate vice president innovation, 色情视频 Division of Research and Innovation; and Todd Butler, dean, College of Arts and Letters.

IF YOU GO

BIG DATA HACKATHON SAN DIEGO
Saturday, Oct 12, 8:30 a.m.-5:50 p.m.
Saturday, Oct. 19, 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m.
Storm Hall West (Room 12, Charles Hostler Hall)

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