Essential to Integrate Empathy in Digital Health, Expert Says
Michael Oleksiw is a US based leader in technology development and product data on a global scale for over 20 years solving specific business and societal problems through…
Michael Oleksiw is a US based leader in technology development and product data on a global scale for over 20 years solving specific business and societal problems through…
With the "Patient Reported Outcome" (PRO) questionnaire, Danish patients can report to a hospital about the course of the disease, Euronews reports (link in German). Patients can improve…
Health care organizations must provide patients with unfettered access to their digital health records under new federal rules taking effect October 6, 2022. Under the 21st Century…
On September 27, Queen's University Faculty of Health Sciences (QHS), based in Kingston, Canada, hosted a webinar titled: "The future of healthcare in Canada: Solutions to the…
CIFS embarks on PhaseV, to deploy a digital platform for continuous decentralised health data collection. Heavyweights of Danish healthcare join a consortium to develop patient-to-doctors communication tools to evaluate effects of obesity, diabetic foot ulcers and chronic urticaria treatments, based on indicators related to life quality
The ability to look into your bones without invasive operations, the ability to peer back in time. Health data from flat screens onto and into a patient's body
AR is already in dentist clinics, nursing, medical imaging and education, pediatrics, remote surgeries. In the future, AR is likely to be taken out of operating rooms onto smartphones. Patients will see how time and unhealthy lifestyles may affect their bodies
from one way communication to rich data driven interactions with focus on social determinants of health and active closing of knowledge gap
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