澳门六合彩开奖接口

The world is in a mental health crisis, and these startups are using tech to make a difference

Three startups at The Hub, 澳门六合彩开奖接口's entrepreneurial incubator, are finding new ways to use technology to address mental health issues

-- article by Alexa Battler, published March 9th, 2023

From  to the , organizations have warned that the world is in a mental health crisis 鈥 one that young entrepreneurs are fighting with tech-based startups.

The Hub is an entrepreneurial incubator at 澳门六合彩开奖接口, and its director, Donovan Dill, says he can鈥檛 recall ever seeing so many startups related to mental health.

鈥淭here鈥檚 been an awakening, I think, for concerns about everybody鈥檚 mental health, about how we can help others,鈥 Dill says.

 

Neurokin

One of these companies is , a one-stop information shop for marginalized neurodivergent people who identify as women, 2SLGBTQ+ and/or people of colour. The company was co-founded by two cousins and best friends living with autism and ADHD; the duo are trying to make the platform they needed as they struggled to get diagnosed and understand their brains.

The website is a distillation of Maria Khandaker鈥檚 more than six years of research into neurodivergence. A mental health studies student at 澳门六合彩开奖接口, Khandaker scoured the internet to make sense of her symptoms 鈥 she had a strong sense of justice, a tendency to take things literally and difficulty compartmentalizing, among other traits that led her to believe she wasn鈥檛 just experiencing the anxiety and depression she was diagnosed with. 

鈥淎t every step, I had to prove that I was going through something I knew I was going through,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 wanted to put something together that people can relate more to than, say, ADHD research. And I felt people would benefit from having that information all in one place.鈥

The site鈥檚 pages bridge a playful writing style and Gen Z slang with evidence-based advice, terminology, general facts and other information that helps users conduct self-assessments and understand the words that may help them navigate their mental health journey. A newsletter sends snippets of the content to people鈥檚 inboxes.

 

EVOLVERE

Tanisha Sylvester鈥檚 startup  has a similar purpose. During her undergrad, Sylvester found many of her classmates didn鈥檛 realize they were experiencing the same mental health struggles as their peers 鈥 no one seemed to be talking about what they were going through. That鈥檚 why EVOLVERE is a website where students share their experiences and access mental health resources.

鈥淚 think what makes us unique is the creative ways that we approach achieving our goal of improving student mental health,鈥 says Sylvester, who completed her master鈥檚 at U of T.

The site has three core features, including a forum for posting shorter reflections and links to resources, such as encouragement and strategies for exam season and , a series of advice students wish they鈥檇 heard during their studies. It also has a blog feed where users post longer articles; a recent entry that detailed a user鈥檚 experience living with an autoimmune condition inspired another user to write about their life with selective mutism. 

鈥淧eople are telling us they find it cathartic to share their experiences and what they鈥檝e learned from them,鈥 Sylvester says. 鈥淭hat sense of community and speaking up helps people feel understood and inspired to advocate for themselves.鈥

Its third feature is a section for challenges 鈥 a way to prompt students to actively practice the mental health care tips shared on the platform and incorporate new healthy habits into their days.

 

mhapy

Meanwhile, Chijindu Ukagwu is a mental health nurse with a startup developing a proactive chatbot. Ukagwu spends much of his shifts asking patients the same questions as a means of tracking their symptoms. Those discussions are repetitive but not robotic, with more social benefits than questionnaires.

鈥淨uestionnaires are not interactive. If you have to answer the same question every day, you're going to get tired,鈥 says Ukagwu, a master鈥檚 student at U of T. 鈥淎 chatbot can engage a patient the way a mental health nurse would.鈥

Ukagwu founded , a company with a chatbot named Ruby that tracks users鈥 mental health symptoms the way nurses do 鈥 by subtly completing standardized mental health screenings through conversations. The robot isn鈥檛 meant to replace human connection, but to facilitate it. Ruby determines a user鈥檚 baseline mood, then notifies their support network, including friends, family or health-care providers, if their symptoms worsen.

鈥淏y looking at all the analytics, a health-care provider can track how, say, the intervention they provided at their last session improved their mental health or not,鈥 he says.

The company is combining different open-source technologies to streamline getting their software on different platforms, meaning any psychotherapist, private practice or other health-care provider will be able to get their own version of the chatbot and host it on their existing app or website.  

Ukagwu and Khandaker won awards at a recent hack-a-thon hosted by The Hub and  which challenged teams to create a more user-friendly way to navigate mental health resources. Coincidentally, EVOLVERE won sixth place in U of T鈥檚  on the same day.

鈥淭he hack-a-thon provided a unique opportunity for Ontario Shores to open up the doors for innovators to co-design and co-develop solutions with our clinicians, staff and patients, for the specific needs identified by our front-line inpatient staff,鈥 says Jeanie Zabukovec, manager of research and academics at Ontario Shores.

 

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