Breadcrumb

null Researchers win innovation award for project to empower patients through data sharing

Award-winning scientists call for more data sharing in health care

November 2019

Source: MUHC Foundation. A team of scientists at the Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre (RI-MUHC) have won the inaugural Trottier Webster Innovation Award for a new project that empowers patients through the Opal patient portal app. Dr. John Kildea and his colleagues will receive $100,000 for their pioneering work to help patients access their personal health care data from multiple hospitals.

“Patients have the greatest vested interest in their own health care outcomes,” notes Dr. Kildea, a scientist at the RI-MUHC and an Assistant Professor at McGill University. “Patients don’t just want comprehensive access to all of their health care data, they are demanding it.”

The Opal patient portal app, a smartphone application developed by Dr. Kildea, Dr. Tarek Hijal and their team at the MUHC, puts power in the hands of patients. With just a few taps, patients have access to unique features such as contextualized medical data, including lab results, medical notes and treatment plans. Opal arose from a dynamic collaboration between Dr. Kildea, Dr. Hijal and breast cancer patient Professor Laurie Hendren, a renowned computer scientist at McGill University who passed away from her illness in May 2019 just as Opal was starting to be used at the MUHC. The award-winning team will further develop Opal as a platform through which willing patients will have the option to donate their health care data for research. In doing so patients will be able to see how their data are used in research studies.

Through the MUHC Foundation, the Trottier Family Foundation and the R. Howard Webster Foundation contributed $3 million to create an endowment for the research innovation fund, which awards the annual $100,000 prize. As part of its mandate to foster a culture of innovation at the RI-MUHC, only the most cutting-edge and transformative proposals are considered for funding.

Learn more on the MUHC Foundation website

The Opal Health Informatics team, from left to right: Marie Hirtle, Dr. Tarek Hijal, Dr. Andréa Laizner, Dr. Jamil Asselah and Dr. John Kildea, accept the inaugural Trottier Webster prize from the MUHC Foundation on behalf of the Opal Health Informatics group (November 2019). Photo: MUHC
The Opal Health Informatics team, from left to right: Marie Hirtle, Dr. Tarek Hijal, Dr. Andréa Laizner, Dr. Jamil Asselah and Dr. John Kildea, accept the inaugural Trottier Webster prize from the MUHC Foundation on behalf of the Opal Health Informatics group (November 2019). Photo: MUHC