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Maldaba are delighted to announce we are now part of the Digital Health.London Accelerator. We are one of the companies in cohort 2 of the Accelerator, which was announced on September the 7th, 2017.
Maldaba were selected as one of the successful 30 out of 127 applications, because of our project My Health Guide, providing service change and digital technology to empower people with learning disabilities to be more in control of their healthcare. Read More
It's the seemingly simple questions, isn't it? Ever wondered what "Digital Healthcare" actually means? In the second of our Camden Coders series, Maldaba Director Mark Clements reflects on what we mean by the term and the implication of this for the future. In true Maldaba-style, he does this by going back over a hundred years! (After all, understanding where we came from tells us a lot about where we might end-up.) Read More
We're really happy to announce that Maldaba has won the Softech Intl 2017 Awards for 'Best Web Development Boutique - London'. Softech structure their awards to recognise "the most innovative and dynamic firms throughout the industry that offer unique and versatile solutions and support to their clients" and we're certainly delighted to have received an award that speaks so clearly to our own ethos and approach to working with our customers. Read More
In 2016 Lorenzo Gordon from Maldaba worked with Imperial College London. It was an entertaining collaboration between Lorenzo, director of Maldaba Ltd. and Professor Dominik Weiss, to guide undergraduate students in producing a presentation and in learning how to communicate with a non-scientific audience. Professor Weiss is Professor of Environmental Geochemistry at Imperial's Faculty of Engineering, in the Department of Earth Science & Engineering. The undergraduates were learning about Arsenic in the environment, its life-cycle and its effect on humans. A strong part of Professor Weiss's work also revolves around how research and academic information is communicated to the wider world, and for this he turned to Maldaba. Read More
Welcome to the first instalment of our new Camden Coders series! In the series we celebrate Maldaba's north London origins (both Mark and Lorenzo are local Camden boys, after all), and look at different perspectives, aspects and predictions for the future of digital technology, Maldaba-style!
Our first post looks at the barriers to the widespread adoption of digital healthcare based on Maldaba's experiences since 2002 working on digital healthcare research and front-line work with the likes of UCL, King's College London, Imperial, the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, the NHS (especially in Brighton and Yorkshire), the University of Sydney in Australia, a number of hospitals in Denmark, Brook, the Family Planning Association, Westminster Drug Project, the Richmond Fellowship and Together for Mental Wellbeing, to name but a few! Read More
In January 2017 Lorenzo, Maldaba Director, presented his reflections of Maldaba's fifteen (!) years working as technologists in digital health. As well as covering recent projects like My Health Guide and My Living Will, Lorenzo looked back at older projects such as My Contraception Tool. Read More
We're delighted to announce that Maldaba won the Performance through Partnership award yesterday at the Yorkshire & Humber Academic Health Science Network Innovation, Improvement & Impact conference in Leeds. Read More
Whilst it is common for us at Maldaba to work with partners who are not expert or familiar with digital technology, it's rare to also work with partners who are as open and as innovative as the staff who work with Learning Disability patients at Humber Trust NHS. Read More
Radio Humberside featured My Health Guide in their news bulletins on the 27th November 2016, shortly after we realised our initial data analysis of the Humber NHS trial of 200 users with My Health Guide. The article featured throughout the day, along with snippets of an interview Radio Humberside carried-out with Dennis Barron, the father of one of the trial users, Carl. Read More
Maldaba are delighted, and very excited to announce that following a thorough tendering process, we have been selected as the chosen supplier for a Case Management System by the charity Together for Mental Wellbeing. Read More
A games developer from London has developed a mobile phone game called ‘Cigbreak’ aimed at smokers wanting to quit the habit.
Cigbreak has been developed by Hope Caton, writer of the global hit video game TombRaider IV: The Last Revelation. Together with business partner Robin Bell, they have formed Healthy Games with the aim of making games that improve health. Read More
We’re thrilled to announce that Humber NHS Foundation Trust have extended their 6-month pilot of My Health Guide to 12 months, continuing until the… Read More
A ‘smart’ breakthrough in the treatment of young people who self harm could be on the horizon!
The My Self Help tool, developed by Camden-based tech firm Maldaba in close liaison with King’s College London, University of Bristol, the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine and NSPCC, is a web-based application that supports decision-making for young people who self harm. Read More
Maldaba's app for learning-disabled adults, My Health Guide, features in a two-page article in Hull Daily Mail. Read More
When the Leeds-based Lilac Grove housing co-operative required bespoke software that would help them manage their community they turned to Camden-based software specialists Maldaba Ltd. Read More
We're thrilled to announce that our tablet-based app for people with learning difficulties, My Health Guide, has won another award! Read More
Congratulations to the My Living Will project, who last month were part of Nesta's New Radicals 2016 list, published in the Observer. Read More
We’re delighted to announce that, from today, Tuesday 31st May 2016, My Health Guide is available to the general public! Read More
The secret’s out! Now you can find out where the Maldaba name came from. Watch our video on company… Read More
Our academic partners at King's College London have published a podcast about the self-harm research project that uses two pieces of Maldaba software: Annalisa and Elicia. Read More