Healthcare Innovation Stories

Innovation Spotlight: How Muskoka Algonquin Healthcare is reinventing Stroke Recovery with Digital Health

May 28, 2025
By
Seamless

At our recent SeamlessMD customer conference, we were excited to sit down with Rebecca Liebau, Director of Clinical Services at Muskoka Algonquin Healthcare, to discuss their newest innovation: using SeamlessMD to support stroke recovery.

From Surgery to Stroke: Expanding the Use of SeamlessMD

Over the past three years, MAHC has steadily scaled SeamlessMD across surgical specialties, now serving nine patient journeys, including for colorectal, hysterectomy, breast surgery, and endoscopy.

Now, MAHC has gone a step further - launching digital programs for stroke recovery and mental health patients. This shift reflects a growing recognition that digital health tools like SeamlessMD aren’t just for surgery or chronic care - they can play a powerful role across the continuum of care.

Building the Stroke Program from the Ground Up

Because this was one of the first programs of its kind, the team took a thoughtful, collaborative approach to designing a stroke-specific digital experience.

The goal: empower patients after discharge and improve self-management between in-person visits.

Key features of the new Stroke Program include:

  • A Stroke Knowledge Survey
    Helping patients and families assess their understanding of stroke symptoms, recovery timelines, and lifestyle considerations
  • Post-Stroke Symptom and Biometric Tracking
    Patients can log symptoms and vital signs after discharge, promoting early detection of complications
  • Curated Education and Support Resources
    Content is tailored to common post-stroke challenges such as mobility, mental health, nutrition, and caregiver support

A Model for Non-Surgical Use Cases

In addition to stroke, MAHC is applying SeamlessMD to mental health workflows - another area where traditional models struggle with continuity between touchpoints. Enrollment for these non-surgical programs happens through multiple entry points, including:

  • Community referrals (e.g. CMHA for mental health)
  • Acute care and rehab teams (for stroke patients)
  • Emergency department visits

Staff then enroll eligible patients manually into SeamlessMD, triggering an activation email so patients can begin using the app immediately - on web or mobile.

Early Momentum and Broader Vision

While it’s still early days for the stroke program, the future is bright. This collaboration with MACH’s stroke recovery and mental health programs demonstrates a powerful idea: digital patient engagement isn’t just for surgery. With the right design, it can support a wide range of chronic and episodic conditions - wherever patients are in their care journey.

We’re proud to support MAHC in leading the way on this front - and can’t wait to see the impact as these new programs evolve.

Innovation Spotlight: How Muskoka Algonquin Healthcare is reinventing Stroke Recovery with Digital Health

Posted by:
Seamless
on
May 28, 2025

At our recent SeamlessMD customer conference, we were excited to sit down with Rebecca Liebau, Director of Clinical Services at Muskoka Algonquin Healthcare, to discuss their newest innovation: using SeamlessMD to support stroke recovery.

From Surgery to Stroke: Expanding the Use of SeamlessMD

Over the past three years, MAHC has steadily scaled SeamlessMD across surgical specialties, now serving nine patient journeys, including for colorectal, hysterectomy, breast surgery, and endoscopy.

Now, MAHC has gone a step further - launching digital programs for stroke recovery and mental health patients. This shift reflects a growing recognition that digital health tools like SeamlessMD aren’t just for surgery or chronic care - they can play a powerful role across the continuum of care.

Building the Stroke Program from the Ground Up

Because this was one of the first programs of its kind, the team took a thoughtful, collaborative approach to designing a stroke-specific digital experience.

The goal: empower patients after discharge and improve self-management between in-person visits.

Key features of the new Stroke Program include:

  • A Stroke Knowledge Survey
    Helping patients and families assess their understanding of stroke symptoms, recovery timelines, and lifestyle considerations
  • Post-Stroke Symptom and Biometric Tracking
    Patients can log symptoms and vital signs after discharge, promoting early detection of complications
  • Curated Education and Support Resources
    Content is tailored to common post-stroke challenges such as mobility, mental health, nutrition, and caregiver support

A Model for Non-Surgical Use Cases

In addition to stroke, MAHC is applying SeamlessMD to mental health workflows - another area where traditional models struggle with continuity between touchpoints. Enrollment for these non-surgical programs happens through multiple entry points, including:

  • Community referrals (e.g. CMHA for mental health)
  • Acute care and rehab teams (for stroke patients)
  • Emergency department visits

Staff then enroll eligible patients manually into SeamlessMD, triggering an activation email so patients can begin using the app immediately - on web or mobile.

Early Momentum and Broader Vision

While it’s still early days for the stroke program, the future is bright. This collaboration with MACH’s stroke recovery and mental health programs demonstrates a powerful idea: digital patient engagement isn’t just for surgery. With the right design, it can support a wide range of chronic and episodic conditions - wherever patients are in their care journey.

We’re proud to support MAHC in leading the way on this front - and can’t wait to see the impact as these new programs evolve.

Recent news from SeamlessMD

TDP 207: BSMH’s Jason Szczuka: Building Coalitions That Actually Move Innovation Forward, The 18-24 Month “Scale or Sunset” Rule for Pilots, and Creating Organization Readiness Through Incentives and Desperation
December 11, 2025

TDP 207: BSMH’s Jason Szczuka: Building Coalitions That Actually Move Innovation Forward, The 18-24 Month “Scale or Sunset” Rule for Pilots, and Creating Organization Readiness Through Incentives and Desperation

Learn More
TDP 206: MHS’ ACMIO Dr. Michael Weiss: Fixing "Rogue" Clinical Notes, Designing Workflows for Rare but High-Risk Events, and Applying Goldilocks Principles to Governance
December 9, 2025

TDP 206: MHS’ ACMIO Dr. Michael Weiss: Fixing "Rogue" Clinical Notes, Designing Workflows for Rare but High-Risk Events, and Applying Goldilocks Principles to Governance

Learn More
TDP 205: Duke Health’s Dr. Eric Poon: Understanding Informatics as a Sociotechnical Team Sport, Co-Creating AI Tools to Promote Accountability, and Why We Must Kiss a lot of Frogs to Find Real Innovation
December 4, 2025

TDP 205: Duke Health’s Dr. Eric Poon: Understanding Informatics as a Sociotechnical Team Sport, Co-Creating AI Tools to Promote Accountability, and Why We Must Kiss a lot of Frogs to Find Real Innovation

Learn More