European Digital Health in Brief: Background, Landscape, Stakeholders
How do Europeans understand digital health? How it came about and developed, where are we now and what to expect. Major stakholders of the European digital health and startups
How do Europeans understand digital health? How it came about and developed, where are we now and what to expect. Major stakholders of the European digital health and startups
Centralised vs federated vs hybrid networks, what will define future network architectures in healthcare? What challenges to address on the way to optimal health network architectures?
Radical breakthroughs in the tools used to visualize the embryonic development, genetic engineering technologies, single-cell sequencing originate in collaborations between biologists, physicists, engineers, and computer scientists, on the mission to build a digital twin of an embryon
Pills with cameras and clinical grade wearables to communicate with your lifestyle smartwatches. IoMT classification and advantages, the second text in the series on the Internet of Medical Things
Robotic surgery, ingestible sensors, connected inhalers and contact lenses. Depression, hygiene, heart-rate, glucose monitoring. Motivation and analytics. Internet of Medical Things provides it all and can do more, if identified challenges are addressed
The first in the series on IoMT where we look into key enablers to the global ecosystem of interconnected medical devices that talk to each other over internet
A token is a piece of code that certifies information about you in an immutable and practically undestroyable decentralized database. It can be your health data, your genetic dataset, tokenization will allow you to trace how it's used. But tokens may be also used in remote provision of healthcare services, as well as to motivate us to a healthy lifestyle
What new uses of biomarkers to expect in the future? We look into the past, present and possible futures of analogue and digital biomarkers in clinical settings and outside them
NFTs represent any unique asset. Started out in cryptoart, NFTs may benefit healthcare in the near future, by tokenizing health data, especially genetic data, blood transfusions, production and distribution of drugs and medical devices
Minimalism in the Internet of Medical Things, health data ownership back to patients, automation of regulatory compliance. What else will the future bring to digital health infrastructures?