He is our front-end developer, who turns code into actual screens that medical staff interact with every day. To do that with full power, Artem recharges in the gym - and soon also while flying over forests.
Artem, which parts of imito do you take care of?
I mostly work on the desktop versions of imitoCam and imitoWound. While medical staff take wound pictures with their smartphones, they sometimes also want to review wound healing on a computer screen to make more complex decisions. I’d say about 70% of my work involves adjusting the user-facing (front-end) software of these desktop versions.
© imito AG / Chrysanth Sulzberger
Have you always worked in the healthcare industry?
I worked in several areas, but one software I worked on before was as well for doctors to take snapshots of patients after surgery to track their progress. Now at imito, in addition to photos, they can also measure wound size and track the wound area reduction precisely. I’m happy that I can help further in the medical sphere at imito now.
© imito AG / Chrysanth Sulzberger
We also translate some information that doctors and nurses gather into statistical diagrams, for example, for all decubitus cases recorded. We visualise these because it is quite important for customers to review why and when a decubitus happened and discuss it with insurance companies.
© imito AG / Chrysanth Sulzberger
These statistics were developed by us in 2024 and I further improved them. We also restricted the view so that only quality managers can see them - not other user roles like nurses, doctors, or supervisors. On the other hand, for example, quality managers can only view the wound assessments recorded, while nurses can edit their own assessments.
And the different roles are configured via the dashboard?
Yes, the dashboard is an admin panel where (IT) managers of the hospital, but also our imito customer support team around Florian, Christoph, and Svetlana, usually have access to help out.
© imito AG / Chrysanth Sulzberger
The dashboard reminds me of a Swiss knife. It's configurable like a Swiss knife - and for each customer, we configure it individually. In there, we set up the users and their roles, add new departments step by step, enable any custom-built feature, or disable a full app screen - all based on the customers’ needs.
Have you always liked playing with digital Swiss knives, or what came before IT?
I remember playing with knives and fires in my childhood, yes. While studying Computer Science, I was interested in economics for a while, but I’ve stuck to IT for over 12 years now.
Actually, the very first money I earned was by reselling some building tools - not quite knives, but similar. My dad worked all his life in the construction industry. So right on my 14th birthday, he gave me some builder tools and told me he thought I could make 50% profit reselling them if I set up a stand close to the local building store. So I did - it was very exciting to make my first deals on my 14th birthday.
Are you also building your own digital Swiss knife in your spare time?
I once developed an all-rounder appointment booking app to book a massage or barber. Why? Because I was annoyed by calling and texting back and forth with exactly these service providers. I just wanted to book it, and at that time, I only found one existing application that maybe had half of the features I wanted. So I just built it myself instead.
But you are still going strong in building up your own YouTube channel - what's the story?
Yes, to be honest, the first video was rather an accident. I had an American friend who I went to the gym with, and one day I decided that just wishing him “happy birthday” was too boring. So I decided to create a happy birthday video combined with a parody for him.
I think I cut that video 40 times in different ways - 40 tries to create a funny 8-second-long happy birthday video. I remember the cat on my knees falling asleep while I kept cutting. But I really liked the video in the end, and that made me continue. Now I release one video every day at 11 am, always recorded at the gym - and have been going strong for 4 years. Now, it's my way of creating art, and I really enjoy it.



© Canva / pexels
© Canva / gettyimagespro


