Vitalog opens new research unit

  • 3 September 2008

Vitalog has opened a new unit to focus on European research activities and projects.

The Brussels-based company, which specialises in IT-enabled health promotion and support programmes, says the new unit will participate in research on subjects such as the determinants of health, lifestyle, nutrition, e-health, education and e-inclusion.

“Medical research shows that the most efficacious way to promote a healthy lifestyle is a structured behavioural programme,” the company says in a press release.

“However, the intensity of care [this requires] is usually localised near research-base universities and hospitals and is cost-prohibitive. With Vitalog, real behaviour modification programmes for the masses have become a realistic possibility.”

Vitalog argues that the Internet and mobile phones are the best way to disseminate state-of-the-art programmes to larger populations. More than 300 million Europeans have Internet access and mobile phone penetration has reached almost 100% across the EU.

Its main product is Vitalog Pss, a software as a service platform that provides a database and management centre to handle users and lifestyle programmes, a portal for registering web-users and mobiles, and a communication layer to interact with them.

It offers Vitalog Pss HealthCoach to consumers and Vitalog Pss HealthCoachPro to the medical market. Both programs provide a "personal health coach" to users to encourage them to make behaviour changes and adopt a healthier lifestyle.

Link

Vitalog 

Subscribe To Our Newsletters

Subscribe to our newsletter

Subscribe To Our Newsletter

Related News

Health data from UK Biobank listed for sale on Chinese website

Health data from UK Biobank listed for sale on Chinese website

De-identified UK Biobank medical data of 500,000 participants was breached and listed for sale on a Chinese website.
De-identified UK Biobank health data accidentally published online

De-identified UK Biobank health data accidentally published online

UK Biobank has confirmed that volunteers' de-identified health data has sometimes been unintentionally published online by researchers.
Study finds virtual treatment can benefit eating disorder patients

Study finds virtual treatment can benefit eating disorder patients

Research from Oxford Health has found that virtual treatment can help prevent admissions and support recovery for eating disorder patients.