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Digital health equipment,mobile applications,doctor in your pocket....

 A 3-lead wireless ECG, is designed to be prescribed by a doctor and worn continuously under a patient’s clothing. It continuously sends ECG readings to the user’s Android smartphone via Bluetooth and, from there, sends the data over the mobile network to a server. The patient’s clinician can then access readings via a web browser.
The device will also send the clinician an alarm when it detects irregular heart rate readings. The physician can analyze the data and send an email to the patient. If the patient is using additional Bluetooth connected devices like a weight scale or blood pressure monitor, the monitor application can display that data as well.
Users can elect to enable a GPS feature in the connected app, so that first responders can find them easily in an emergency. The company recommends the device for use in research, ambulance care, pre- and post-surgical heart patients, and people expecting heart problems.

A SIMPLE SENSOR to record vitals( non-interventional sensors to read blood pressure,blood sugar,oxygen,cardiograph,etc...) of the patient and send the data wirelessly to the nearest receiver- cell phone,tab,laptop,which will send the data to the server . so,any person. physician can see that data by net and alert the patient by SMS/ Email.

wearable device tracks a baby’s oxygen, heart rate, sleep, temperature and rollover alerts. users breathe into the device, it collects data about the breathing and sends it to the user’s smartphone.

WiFi, wireless medical telemetry service, and Bluetooth as among the most often used wireless technologies connected medical devices in healthcare settings.

Bluetooth-connected diagnostic amulet, which is embedded with medical tests. The amulet opens to reveal a pad with four quadrants: red for blood, yellow for urine, blue for saliva, and green for breath. The pad absorbs samples and then transmits test results to a mobile app via Bluetooth.

Comments


  1. The professionals that are salivating ... as he says ... I don't think np's desire such patients as much as they are perhaps better equipped to care for these patients! I get excited when I get consults on patients that the doctors are asking me to manage because they simply have exhausted their tool box ... This is difficult to control symptoms ... and difficult families and psychosocial issues ... as well as undecided families as far as their goals of care. So ... I suppose I salivate at the chance to say -- hey this recommendation is what you need!
    ALOKA UST-9124

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