A New Way
to Manage Pain

Pinpoint™ An HPC and Klein Buendel collaboration

Pinpoint logo

About Pinpoint

In partnership with Klein Buendel, parents and medical experts, HPC has developed Pinpoint, a learning and tracking tool for teens with SCD. NIH Small Business grants (SBIR) facilitated this effort in a classic form of public-private partnership. The study’s Expert Advisory Board was formed by clinicians from institutions and nonprofit organizations including HOPE for SCD, UIC, Emory Healthcare, Children’s National, Marquette University College of Nursing, and the International Association of Sickle Cell Nurses and Professional Associates.

  • Using gaming technology, Pinpoint is an online program that provides a safe, convenient tool for teens to learn about, track, assess, and communicate about their sickle cell pain with medical providers and parents.
  • Pinpoint offers an innovative Pain Assessment Tool and a Pain Diary to log physical and emotional pain symptoms related to their blood disorder and all with the touch of a finger to describe and assess the intensity, duration, quality, nature, and location of their pain and report it to their parents and physician.
  • Pinpoint is a mobile-friendly online web application and works on any smartphone or touch-screen device
  • Teens can play games, watch videos, learn preventive health tips, and visit the Patient Stories section with real stories and inspirational messages told by other sickle cell patients.
Kids with laptop

What is Sickle Cell Disease?

Common Types of SCD

  • HbSS
  • HbSC
  • HbS Beta Thalassemia

Sickle cell disease is a common blood disorder someone is born with, inherited genetically from their parents, where red blood cells form into hard C-shaped cells instead of their normal healthy, soft, round shape. There are different types of blood cells that travel through the body, each with important jobs to do. White blood cells help fight infections, platelets help stop bleeding when you get a cut or scrape, and red blood cells carry oxygen throughout the body. For someone with sickle cell disease, the sickled red blood cells can easily get stuck trying to move through the body, causing a traffic jam where other blood cells can’t continue on their path. This type of blockage of the blood cells can create severe pain and many other health complications, some of which are quite serious and require emergency medical treatment.

Sickle cell disease is truly an international disease affecting more than 30 million individuals from all different cultures around the world and an estimated 100,000+ people in the United States alone, though it does disproportionately affect patients of color and people who are frequently exposed to malaria from regions like West and sub-Saharan Africa, Southeast Asia, the Indian subcontinent, and near the Mediterranean. It is the most common serious genetic disorder in the United States, more common than cystic fibrosis and hemophilia. Most American hospitals screen all newborn babies at birth for the type of hemoglobin responsible for causing sickle cell disease.

How to manage and differentiate between the chronic and acute pain and track all the symptoms caused by sickle cell disease is an ongoing challenge for patients with this blood disorder. So, to help combat that challenge, we created Pinpoint.

How does it work?

Using gaming technology, Pinpoint is a mobile app that provides a safe, convenient tool for patients to learn about, track, assess, and communicate about their sickle cell pain with medical providers and parents.

Mother Helping her Daughter use a Laptop

Key Features

Pain Assessment and Tracking

Pain Assessment and Tracking

Pinpoint offers an innovative Pain Assessment Tool that patients can use with the touch of a finger to assess their pain and symptoms which they can log into the Pain Diary

Home Electronics

Games

Patients can play games to learn SCD terminology and words that will help them to more specifically describe their physical and psycho-social pain symptoms when communicating with their parents and caregivers

Doctor and Patient

Sharing Your Pain Reports

Pinpoint works on any smartphone or smart mobile device and pain assessment reports can be shared electronically with parents and/or providers through the app with the teen’s consent

Educational Content

Hope & Destiny Series

The educational content in the Pinpoint app comes from the renowned and best-selling Hope & Destiny book series, written by leading clinical experts in hematology: James Eckman, MD; Lewis L Hsu, MD, PhD; and Allan Platt, PA-C, MMSc.

Hope & Destiny is HPC International, Inc.’s premier educational book series on sickle cell disease, and access to much of this information is available through the Pinpoint™ app. Books in this series are tailored for different reader age groups including adults and parents as well as adolescent patients.

Hope and Destiny Series
Doctor Analysis

Clinically Evaluated

Market research, focus groups, surveys and interviews were conducted virtually and in person with teens, parents and clinical specialists in communities across the country as part of the Pinpoint study recruitment. The initial prototype consisted of a Pain Assessment Tool, vocabulary game, body scanner reflection, educational self-disclosure activity, and excerpts from the Hope and Destiny Jr. book. Healthcare providers were interviewed on the app’s acceptability and potential function within the clinical practice (n=4). Teens participated in cognitive interviews, focus groups, and usability testing (n=16), of which the average age was 14.5 + 1.3 years, 33.75% were female, and 50% were diagnosed with Hb SS (n=13).

The System Usability Scale (SUS), a validated tool for assessing the usability and acceptability of technological products, served as the primary outcome. The preliminary SUS score (n=5) was 82.5 (68% is “above average”), suggesting a high level of acceptability and usability among users. The Phase II study was completed in Dec 2021, and results will be released in late 2022.

Source; Myers VH, Buller MA, Strickfaden S, Jerrod T, Hudson H, Lippert M, et. al. (2018, April). Pinpoint: Gaming technology to engage adolescent sickle cell patients in precision pain management. Poster presented at the annual meeting of the Society of Behavioral Medicine. New Orleans, LA.

Built by Clinical Experts: Key Contributors

Alan Platt
Lewis L. Hsu, MD, PhD
Deepika Darbari, MD
Hilton Hudson, MD, FACS

Special Thanks To Our Clinical Experts

Lisa Rose, M.Ed

Lisa Rose, M.Ed

Dora Clayton-Jones, PhD, RN, CPNP-PC

Dora Clayton-Jones,
PhD, RN, CPNP-PC

Carlton Dampier, MD, CPI

Carlton Dampier, MD, CPI

Julie Panepinto, MD, MSPH

Julie Panepinto, MD, MSPH

Talal Ali, MS, PhD

Talal Ali, MS, PhD

Zenaide (Zena) M. Quezado, MD

Zenaide (Zena) M. Quezado, MD

Lauren Patrick, MS / Healthmonix

Lauren Patrick, MS / Healthmonix

Parent Advisory Board Members

Lisa Meatchem
Marque Reed-Shackelford
Myesha Soukup
Oyewola Adeyinka
Sameta Carpenter
Shornita Shavers
TaLana Hughes, MPH, Executive Director of SCDAI
Tanya Anderson

Family using computer

Research & News about Pinpoint

Publications

Research / Grants

How to Order

You can order Pinpoint directly from HPC or if you are a provider you can order several subscriptions to the app for your patients.