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Killer apps that could keep you healthy

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Category: Research
Type: News
Source: PNNL
Date: Tuesday, October 22nd, 2013

October 22, 2013 Share

Student-developed mobile apps help keep you from getting sick

  • Mobile apps to fight the threats of food-related illnesses and influenza

    Pacific Northwest National Lab hosted a competition this summer where graduate students designed 2 mobile apps to fight the threats of food-related illnesses and influenza.

  • iOS app FL•U

    An avatar of "Courtney" displays flu-like symptoms - sore throat, coughing and fatigue - on the iOS app FL•U, pronounced 'flu you'. Developed by students at a Pacific Northwest National Lab competition, the app allows self-reporting users to contribute to localized breakout maps.

  • FoodFeed

    FoodFeed, an app for Android, brings together reports from various sources to warn users about recalls on products like food or over-the-counter medicine. Students developed FoodFeed at a Pacific Northwest National Lab competition.

  • FoodFeed

    A search on FoodFeed, an app for Android, compares health code violations at a restaurant to the average number of violations in the area. Students developed FoodFeed at a Pacific Northwest National Lab competition.

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RICHLAND, Wash. - For those wanting to keep their distance from health threats like E. coli-contaminated lettuce or the flu, there are 2 upcoming apps for that.

The D.O.E.'s Pacific Northwest National Lab hosted a competition this summer where graduate students designed 2 mobile apps to fight the threats of food-related illnesses and the flu. The apps are called FoodFeed and FL•U (pronounced 'flu you'). The Defense Department's Defense Threat Reduction Agency provided backing to PNNL to develop web-based analytics and mobile apps as part of its Biosurveillance Ecosystem (BSVE) program.

"Much of the information we need to fight health threats already exists as public data, websites and observations from people on the streets," said Court Corley, data scientist and lead investigator at PNNL. "What we need is all that information in one place, so we can put it in the hands of people. Mobile apps do that."

FoodFeed

Designed for an Android operating system, FoodFeed alerts users about threats that come from food - whether it's from a grocery store or restaurant.

The app has 3 tabs, one of which is a news feed of articles and alerts on food recalls, illness outbreaks and other breaking consumer-safety information. For example, someone shopping at the grocery store could check the news tab and notice the cilantro in their cart has been recalled due to a possible Listeria monocytogenes contamination.

Another tab shows health code violations at restaurants. Users can search for restaurant records - hopefully before ordering - read the details of specific violations, and compare restaurant ratings to the average number of violations in the area.

The last tab provides general information on the risks associated with food, such as the recommended temperature to cook beef and what harmful bacteria can be found in raw chicken.

Users can look after their friends' stomachs too. They can share information from FoodFeed on social media or report suspected food poisoning to the local health department.

FL•U

Designed for iOS, FL•U lets users share if they have influenza or flu-like symptoms. Their voluntarily submitted information can help create localized outbreak maps.

To use the app, users create a customized avatar that visually displays symptoms the users submit. For example, if a user reports a fever of 101 F, their avatar's face turns red. When a user has been diagnosed with the flu by a doctor, they can update their avatar to hold a balloon that looks like a germ.

A user can choose to make their avatar visible to others - including health departments - in the form of an interactive map. And for those afraid of losing friends every time they have the sniffles, users can share information anonymously.

Not only would the information benefit local health departments, but users can see how many people are sick in their area or search other areas too. Planning a road trip? The number of sick people could help you decide between Portland and Seattle, for instance.

Making the apps

As a key player in the White House's National Strategy for Biosurveillance, PNNL suggested this first-of-its-kind competition at the Lab as an answer to a national call for improved biosurveillance tools.

"Whether it's a natural disaster or a disease outbreak, a public health event can come out of nowhere," said Chrissie Noonan, a PNNL research analyst and mentor to the students. "We're asking how we can stay ahead of the curve, and one answer is to develop mobile tools."

The 10-week competition brought 7 graduate students with strong mobile-app development skills from schools across the nation to the laboratory. There, they received a crash-course on biosurveillance from industry experts. Along with help from Noonan and Corley, Michael J. Henry, a visual analytics researcher, guided the students as their lead mentor.

"These students came from different backgrounds with diverse experience," Henry said. "It was their creativity that brought a fresh perspective to solving biosurveillance problems."

Each student pitched app ideas, and then the teams chose to develop FoodFeed and FL•U based on input from their mentors.

The apps could rest in your hand soon. PNNL is working to license the apps and make them public in the next few months.

Tags: Fundamental Science, Biology

Interdisciplinary teams at Pacific Northwest National Lab address many of America's most pressing issues in energy, the environment and national security through advances in basic and applied science. Founded in 1965, PNNL employs 4,300 staff and has an yearly budget of nearly $1 billion. It is managed by Battelle for the D.O.E.. For more information, visit the PNNL News Center, or follow PNNL on Facebook, Google+, LinkedIn and Twitter.

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