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Health Collab Symposium


 HEALTH COLLAB SYMPOSIUM
DESIGN FOR HEALTH — ASIA PACIFIC 
SYMPOSIUM PROGRAMMONDAY 3 DECEMBER 2018BUILDING H, LEVEL 8. MONASH UNIVERSITY CAULFIELD CAMPUS
8.30AM COFFEE AND REGISTRATION
9.00AM SYMPOSIUM OPENING
9.15AM KEYNOTE 1: HEALTH COLLAB: OUR JOURNEY SO FAR 
Daphne Flynn & Mark Armstrong, Monash University
10.00AM KEYNOTE 2: WHAT IS DESIGN FOR HEALTH? PROVOCATIONS & QUESTIONS Claire Craig & Paul Chamberlain, Lab4Living: Sheffield Hallam University
10.30AM MORNING TEA
11.00AM KEYNOTE 3: TAKING A DESIGN STANCE Harold Nelson, Carnegie Melon University
11.30AM KEYNOTE 4: DESIGN LAB EXPERIENCES Stephen Reay, Auckland University of Technology
12.00PM TALKS: VITALIC MEDICAL: CONNECTED HEALTH FOR BETTER PATIENT CARE Planet Innovation
12.30PM TALKS: SAFER CARE VICTORIA Caroline Frankland. Senior Project Manager – Safer Care Victoria 
LUNCH BREAK Optional tour of the Monash University Sensilab
1.30PM PANEL 1: COLLABORATION BETWEEN CLINICIANS, HOSPITALS AND DESIGNERS
2.30PM PANEL 2: COLLABORATION BETWEEN INDUSTRY AND ACADEMIA
3.30PM AFTERNOON TEA
4.00PM PANEL 3: EMERGING TECHNOLOGY IN HEALTHCARE
5.00PM WRAP UP AND CLOSE
5.15–7PM HEALTH COLLAB EXHIBITION & CLOSING DRINKS MADA Gallery
MEET THE HEALTH COLLAB 
— 
PROFESSOR DAPHNE FLYNN 
Daphne is Director of Health Collab, MADA’s Health and Wellbeing lab. She works to encourage collaboration with university researchers, industry partners and medical groups. She draws on a broad range of experiences with various design consultancies, as well as from a variety of businesses from the small business sector to multinational corporations in South East Asia and Europe. 
Daphne’s interest is in applying design thinking methodology to facilitate innovation, particularly in the area of healthcare and wellbeing. 
Her experience includes collaborations with the Monash Institute of Medical Engineering (MIME) in medtech research, designing the award-winning asthma prediction device X-halo, and investigating a Hospital-to-Home healthcare pilot program for Philips. 
PROFESSOR MARK ARMSTRONG 
Mark Armstrong is a Practice Professor in Design, a Fellow of the Design Institute of Australia and an inductee into the Design Hall of Fame. He applies a collaborative multi-disciplinary process of studio-based research to achieve design excellence and innovation. As well as a Practice Professor at Monash University, he was Founder and Director of Blue Sky, one of Australia’s leading design consultancies. Over the last decade, Mark has steered Blue Sky to meet new challenges in the Australia design landscape. His clients include Qantas, Cochlear, ResMed, Omega, Breville, Telstra, Coles, Electrolux, Commonwealth Bank, Philips, Caroma, Victa, United Nations, Olympus and SOCOG 
Follow the Health Collab on Instagram @Health_Collab 
#monashada #HealthCollab
Bionic Eye ‘Gennaris’ Visualisation. 2018. 
ABOUT US 
The Monash University Health Collab is a collaborative research lab located in the Faculty of Art Design and Architecture at Monash University. Health Collab is led by MADA Practice Professors Daphne Flynn and Mark Armstrong. We are an interdisciplinary team of researchers, designers, clinicians and makers interested in the future of health and wellbeing. 
We use design research methods to illuminate opportunities to address unmet clinical needs. We aim to embed design skills in larger interdisciplinary research projects. We connect industry and academia to support translational research outcomes, and often assist in the creation of device prototypes to support clinical trials. 
Our research takes place at the complex intersection of design, business, health services and academia. Through a deeply collaborative design and person-centred approach, we engage patients, clinicians, nurses, device manufacturers, medical researchers, engineers and healthcare management to activate significant, high-impact healthcare services and products into the world. 
We are always on the lookout for partners with ambitions that match our own. Whether you are looking for a collaborative research partner, a place to conduct innovative research, or are an inquisitive postgraduate student, we want to hear from you.
SYMPOSIUM SPEAKERS 
— 
DR CLAIRE CRAIG 
Dr. Claire Craig is Reader in Design and Creative Practice in Health and Co-Director of Lab4Living at Sheffield Hallam University. She is a qualified occupational therapist and an award winning educator and researcher. She has over 20 years experience of working in health-care contexts with particular expertise in the field of design and ageing and design for people living with dementia. She is co-founder and editor of the Design4Health Journal and the Design4Health Conference. 
ASSOC PROF STEPHEN REAY 
Dr Stephen Reay, Associate Professor in Art and Design, is director of Good Health Design, a collaborative design studio at Auckland University of Technology. As one of a multidisciplinary team, whose aim is to develop better health and wellbeing experiences, Steve’s research focuses on how the design of products and services may have a positive impact on people’s health and wellbeing. Good Health Design enables designers to engage with clinical experts, healthcare professionals as well as researchers from other disciplines, to share and test ideas and develop unique solutions. Digital and physical designs are prototyped for use in real world settings. This helps improve the end applications as well as to help generate conversations around design processes. Good Health Design has a teaching role as an “authentic learning” environment where students gain skills, such as problem-solving, and knowledge beyond the classroom by working on matters of real concern.
PROFESSOR PAUL CHAMBERLAIN 
Paul Chamberlain is a graduate of the RCA, Professor of Design, Head of the Art & Design Research Centre and co-director of a transdisciplinary research group Lab4Living www.lab4living.org.uk/ at Sheffield Hallam University, UK. Paul’s interest lies in designing and developing tools and methods to encourage and engender social innovation and he applies this with a focus on healthcare, disability and ageing. His work explores the multi-sensory aspects of design and the role of artefacts that help define pertinent societal questions as much as present solutions. He has led major interdisciplinary projects and delivered keynote lectures at leading international venues on innovation strategies and sustainable approaches to design and manufacture that have played a significant role in supporting regional industrial reconstruction. 
He has published and exhibited widely where research outcomes have resulted in the design of furniture, medical, healthcare, special needs and therapeutic products and systems. These have accrued two Millennium Product design awards from the Design Council UK, an Independent Living Award and an Innovative Design Award from the UK Housing Association 2017. His work is included in the permanent collection of the Victoria and Albert Museum London and the Museum of Modern Art, Prague. He was awarded a major prize in the ‘Imagining Chairs’ category of the ‘Art on Chairs’ international design competition 2013 (sponsored by the Paredes Furniture Design Pole and Institute for Design, Media and Culture Research).
HAROLD G NELSON, PHD, M ARCH 
Dr Harold Nelson is an architect and visiting scholar in the School of Computer Science at the University of Montana. He was the 2009-2010 Nierenberg Distinguished Professor of Design in the School of Design at Carnegie Mellon University. In 2001, he served as president of the International Society for the Systems Sciences (ISSS). He is known as the co-author of The Design Way, a book considered by some to be the Rosetta Stone of Design. 
He is a licensed architect in the State of California and worked as the assistant regional architect for the US Forest Service in San Francisco, California. He is a past-president and a trustee of the International Society for Systems Science. He is the co-founding Director and President of the Advanced Design Institute and owner of Harold G Nelson LLC. 
He has worked with a variety of organizations, including: non-profits and corporations, state and federal agencies, international governments, and the United Nations. Dr Nelson received his PhD from the University of California at Berkeley graduating with ‘Distinction’ where he designed his own doctoral program in the Design of Social Systems. He received his Master of Architecture degree from UC Berkeley, and a Bachelor of Architecture from Montana State University. 
ADJUNCT ASSOC PROF KEITH JOE 
Keith Joe is an Emergency Physician, and has held senior positions in Emergency Medicine over that last 20 years. He has also had extensive experience in health technology at health service, state, and national levels; in the public, private, and commercial sectors. Keith has been a clinical design lead for a number of hospital redevelopments and was the recent chair of the ACEM ED Design working group that was responsible for the latest design guidelines for Australasian Emergency Departments. 
PROFESSOR DON CAMPBELL 
Don Campbell is Service Director of Monash Community at Monash Health, Professor of Medicine at Monash University, a General Physician with appointments at Monash Health and Alice Springs Hospital, and President-elect of the Adult Medicine Division of the Royal Australasian College of Physicians. His clinical and research interests are devoted to furthering the role of design and systems thinking in innovation in healthcare delivery, particularly the role of anticipation in healthcare. He is passionate about design and the hope that it holds in for a better world in the anthropocene era. At present Don is engaged with creating the hospital without walls and the issue of complexity. 
ASSOC PROF YEN CHING CHIUAN 
Associate Professor YEN Ching Chiuan is the Co-Director of Keio-NUS CUTE Center and was the founding Head of Division of Industrial Design (DID) at the National University of Singapore (NUS). He also holds joint appointments with the Smart Systems Institute and Centre for Additive Manufacturing (AM.NUS) at NUS. His research interests lie in methodologies for design, and he champions a pluralistic dimension of design study and research, in particular, in the area of design for healthcare and medicine. He has worked with renowned companies including: ABBOT, ASUS, BMW Designwork USA, Coca Cola, Creative, Chang Gung Memorial Hospital, DELL, Estee Lauder, OSIM, National University Hospital, Samsung, Swarovski, Tupperware, and VISA. 
He has successfully received over S$30M grant as PI/Co-PI/Collaborator from government agencies, universities and industries. His supervision in design is highly regarded and has received more than 50 top international or regional design awards, including the Stanford Longevity Technology Prize 2015, Braunprize 2007, Luminary, red-dot award: design concept 2006, ACM CHI Student Competition 2016 and James Dyson Award (Singapore) 2012.
PETER WILLIAMS 
Peter Williams has over 25 years experience in healthcare, working in senior executive positions in information management and technology, most recently as the head of Digital Design and Information Management for a $20 billion government health and human services agency. He is currently Oracle’s Healthcare Industry Advisor for APAC, helping healthcare organisations to undertake business transformation and digital evolution. He is a member of several international standards bodies and has chaired ISO’s Electronic Health Records Working Group. He is a current Council Member and past President of the Australasian College of Health Informatics.
PROFESSOR JON MCCORMACK 
Professor Jon McCormack is the founder and director of SensiLab, a creative technologies research space that connects multiple and diverse disciplines together to explore the untapped potential of technology. His research spans multiple disciplines, including design, art and computer science. He is the recipient of more than 15 national and international awards for both artistic creativity and technical research, including the Eureka Prize for Innovation in Computer Science and the Lumen Prize for Digital Art. Professor McCormack is currently an Australian Research Council (ARC) Future Fellow, working on a project to change how creativity and computation can be designed into material systems. 
+ MORE TO BE ANNOUNCED 
At the heart of the Health Collab, we are a dynamic and inclusive research environment. We welcome people from diverse backgrounds and from all over the world to join our team. 
RESEARCH COLLABORATION AND INDUSTRY PARTNERSHIPS —
Our most successful projects are driven by productive partnerships, based on collaboration with other academics and research groups. We offer unique opportunities for businesses and organisations to collaborate with the Health Collab and amplify their successes. 
To find out more, please email Daphne Flynn at daphne.flynn@monash.edu 
PHD STUDENTS —

For more information on scholarships and how to apply, email Daphne Flynn at daphne.flynn@monash.edu and visit monash.edu/mada/researchCAMPUS WALK NORTH EVA SNEEUQ EVA SNEEUQ EVA SNEEUQ CAMPUS WALK NORTH CAMPUS WALK SOUTH CAMPUS WALK NORTH CAMPUS WALK SOUTH CAMPUS WALK SOUTH QUEENS AVE NORMANBY ROAD SMITH STREET SIR JOHN MONASH DRIVE SIR JOHN MONASH DRIVE NORMANBY ROAD DUDLEY STREET EPPING STREET TURNER STREET BATES STREET WAVERLEY ROAD STATION STREET PRINCES HIGHWAY (DANDENONG ROAD) PRINCES HIGHWAY (DANDENONG ROAD) PRINCES HIGHWAY (DANDENONG ROAD) WAVERLEY ROAD BURKE ROAD QUEENS AVENUE DERBY ROAD BURKE ROAD PRINCES HIGHWAY (DANDENONG ROAD) PRINCES AVENUE DOUGLAS STREET To Clayton campus and Dandenong ARDRIE RD MOAMA RD SIR JOHN MONASH DRIVE East Caulfield Reserve Library Bookshop MONSU Monash Sport Health Services Monash Connect Caulfield Railway Station Caulfield Racecourse Child Care Centre Caulfield Plaza Access to campus from railway station via underground walkway G Courtyard Sir Ian Potter Sculpture Courtyard Sound Shell Campus Green Futsal courts Security Exit only Car Park MUMA B C D E F A N K S J G H T SYMPOSIUM VENUE 'The Pavilion'. Building H, Level 8. PARKING Hourly and day ticket Parking CAULFIELD STATION Regular trains to Melbourne CBD. EXHIBITION SPACE MADA Gallery - D.120 

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