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Sydney tech community comes together to help those suffering from chronic pain

Members of the Sydney tech and startup communities have come together to come up with new and innovative ways to help those dealing with chronic pain. Run by Chronic Pain Australia, the hackathon took place over the weekend and saw more than 60 people get involved, forming six different teams. About 30 of the participants […]
Dominic Powell
Dominic Powell

Members of the Sydney tech and startup communities have come together to come up with new and innovative ways to help those dealing with chronic pain.

Run by Chronic Pain Australia, the hackathon took place over the weekend and saw more than 60 people get involved, forming six different teams.

About 30 of the participants were developers, with the rest consistently mainly of sufferers of chronic pain, whoย offered the hackers a unique inside view into what they experience on a daily basis.

The hackathon offered $6000 in prizes, and was judged by startup advocates such as Pete Cooper and Chris Howard.

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Startup advisor Anne-Marie Elias designed and ran the competition, which she labelsย a โ€œsocial designโ€ hackathon.

โ€œIโ€™ve worked in government for 30 years, and in that time I realised what we were doing was not making solutions,โ€ Elias tellsย StartupSmart.

โ€œI fell into hacking two years ago because these people know how to get shit done in the social change space.โ€

Along with โ€œchief disrupterโ€, Eliasโ€™ titles include โ€œcollaborative alchemistโ€, which she says is what goes on at her hackathons.

โ€œStartups and tech people donโ€™t have a vested interest in achieving a forced outcome like government does,โ€ she says.

โ€œWhen you get all these unrelated and inspired people together in a room, magic happens.โ€

Elias says the magic wouldnโ€™t have been possible if not for some of the hackathonโ€™s mentors, which included chronic pain sufferers.

These mentors offered advice and points of view from the perspective of someone living with chronic pain, something Elias says was essential.

โ€œWhen you have an end-user contributing to design the whole way through, you get fantastic results,โ€ she says.

โ€œWeโ€™re building social capital around these people living in pain, the feedback we got was great.

โ€œIt was the first time outside of the medical world who are actually interested in their condition and treated them as people.โ€

chronic pain hackathon

The winning team consisted of two developers and two sufferers of chronic pain, who liked the idea so much they joined the team.

The team developed an app called Pain Cools, which is a goal-setting app for sufferers of chronic pain.

Pain Cools provides a peer-to-peer platform for chronic pain sufferers to connect with each other, set goals, and receive rewards.

The creators believe โ€œsetting an ambitious yet achievable goal is a good way of distracting from the pain and regaining controlโ€.

Elias says the Pain Cools creators are looking to make their winning idea a reality, and Chronic Pain Australia will help with that.

โ€œWe set up the winners to pitch again at CPA in July, and weโ€™re going to stack the audience with startup advocates and medical experts,โ€ Elias says.

The rest of the teams will also be encouraged by CPA to keep building on their concepts, as Elias said they โ€œall fantastic ideasโ€.

โ€œWeโ€™re setting up a brains trust for our hackers to talk to about their concepts and build on their ideas,โ€ Elias says.

โ€œIn a few months weโ€™ll bring them in front of some investors and VCs, but we need to give them time to develop their ideas.โ€

Looking to the future, Elias says she wants to keep hacking for social change.

โ€œIโ€™m looking at doing ones for domestic violence and homelessness,โ€ she says.

โ€œThe government is throwing money at these issues, but things keep getting worse.โ€

Photos:ย Jack Skinner

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