War disconnected Tyler Skluzacek and his veteran father until technology united them again.
A year of combat in Iraq rumbled on long after Patrick Skluzacek returned home in 2007. Night terrors robbed him of sleep, a symptom of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) that affects more than 3.6 million veterans.
His battle with night terrors hit a dead end until Tyler created an app to help veterans like his father sleep.
At a 36-hour hackathon — a contest in which computer programmers race to come up with the best new software — held in Washington, D.C., on the last weekend of September, the Macalester College senior's team won with an app called MyBivy, short for "bivouac," or a soldier's temporary sleeping camp.
The app relies on a smartwatch to monitor the sleeper's movement and heartbeat and then produce reports to send to Veterans Affairs medical personnel for analysis. Then, patterns of vibrations and sound would arouse veterans from deep sleep, eliminating night terrors, which affect more than just veterans (estimates put the figure at about 7.8 percent of the U.S. population).
The initial $1,500 prize attracted international media coverage over the past month and then multiplied to more than $25,000 through Kickstarter. The promise of a snooze-inducing app, which has yet to be clinically tested, has piqued interest among professionals in tech (including Google), science and the military — as well as plenty of ordinary people who lie awake at night.
From farm field to battlefield
College wasn't foreseeable for Patrick, 43, who was the same age as his 21-year-old son when he first became a father. He grew up on a farm in Lonsdale, Minn., milking cows and baling hay. His father, John, had served in the military, and Patrick was poised to enlist in the Army in a town that lauded its war heroes.
"I never had the opportunity to go to college," Patrick said. "All of a sudden, my senior year came up, and I didn't have a real plan in life."