Sickweather forecasts flu trouble ahead, urges handwashing and vaccinations
October 15, 2018 | Elyssa Bezner
Sickweather’s illness forecasting technology points to a seasonal uptick in influenza rates for Kansas City, said Laurel Edelman, noting a particularly rough patch expected at the end of year.
“We actually see more of a dome here in Kansas City,” said Edelman, the chief revenue officer for Sickweather, referring to a chart that plots expected flu rates through early 2019. “So you’re going to see a longer period of time of higher illness for the last two weeks of December, and the first two weeks of January.”
The app-based illness forecaster — founded in Baltimore in 2010, but now headquartered in Kansas City — played host Monday to its first Sickweather Cold Cough Flu conference in the Medallion Theater at Plexpod Westport Commons. The event, which also marked Global Handwashing Day, opened with a press conference detailing the firm’s local, regional and national predictions for the coming flu season.
Sickweather’s projections in 2017-2018 strongly correlated to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control’s reports on the previous season, Edelman said, noting a 90-percent accuracy rate for the app’s technology. It’s success has reversed her former attitude that influenza could not be predicted, she said.
“The challenge is to engage you to help you to understand what we’re trying to do,” Edelman said. “And how we’re trying to move forward with this whole concept of forecasting a disease that for many, many years I told everyone could not be forecast.”
“This is a virus. It’s live. It changes,” she said.

Approaches to and attitudes about the flu virus, as well as other diseases, have changed in a way that concerns her, Edelman added.
“Some of them are fantastic in terms of people being aware and knowledgeable, and others, in my personal opinion, are at times troubling,” she said. “An example of that is that the number of parents who don’t vaccinate their children for any disease has quadrupled since 2011.”
Sickweather’s forecast is intended to help build actionable information that could help change that trend, she said.
“This means that there’s still a heck of a long opportunity to vaccinate. If we assume and understand that vaccination becomes effective between seven to 14 days from when you’re vaccinated, now’s the time to be vaccinated,” said Edelman. “You’re vaccinating not just yourself, but you’re also helping to keep your germs away from people who can’t get vaccinated.”
Featured Business

2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
KC’s Smart City ‘Living Lab’ to tackle domestic terrorism threats
Since 2013, more than 160 active shooter situations have taken place in the United States. Imagine for a moment if those events could be prevented or mitigated through the use of technology, such as drones, social media analysis and other sensors. That future is closer than ever according to leaders of Kansas City’s Smart City…
A vibrant arts culture leads to innovation and why hometown investors are vital
Here’s this week’s dish on why the arts community shouldn’t be a benched player on the sidelines of a city’s economy game; the importance of hometown investors to thriving startup communities; and what universities are doing to keep the talent pipeline strong for an entrepreneurial future. Check out more in this series here. The Atlantic…
ClaimKit snags $1.8M from local VC Flyover Capital
Insurance tech startup ClaimKit is tapping an area venture capital fund to help launch its second software offering that quickly analyzes policies. The company raised $1.8 million to launch RiskGenius, which helps to identify and categorize insurance clauses in commercial policies. Leawood-based venture capital firm Flyover Capital led the round, which included participation from the…
Arredondo: The Economist documentary, recent press great for Kansas City
It’s no secret that I’m a total homer for Kansas City. I truly believe that we have the opportunity and ability to become a world-class, 21st-century city. With that being said, I’ve been known to hyperbolize when it comes to the promise I see in Kansas City. But recently, our city has sold itself with…


