The Cutting Edge of Medical Technology Content, Community & Collaboration
This is how the current-day situation of administering medical care runs: in the event of a medical need, the patient or someone attached to her is expected to sense the difficulty and call up the medical center to which the patient is attached. Help arrives after this is done. The medical practitioner may come over and attend to the patient at her location if the situation permits. Or else, the ambulance has to be called. All this has to done during what is called the Golden Hour: the most critical time during which delay or failure in providing care can mean patient fatality. Moreover, how does one account for human error? What if the patient or the person attending on her is not able to sense the changes that warrant medical attention?
What if there could be a system by which all these time-consuming steps could be obviated? That is, the entire process by which all these are currently happening could change to this: the medical center is connected to the patient and is able to sense the changes that trigger medical attention, and circumventing all these routes, neither rush their staff or an ambulance to the patient, but administers care right from where it is located.
This is what connected medical devices, or smart devices, could hold for the future of medical care. By enabling medical attention from the patient's end to the healthcare unit's end; smart devices have the potential to completely alter the healthcare and the medical device industry in the years to come. Smart devices simply change the source of the origin of medical care from the receiver to the provider, bringing about a fundamental shift in the manner and speed at which medical care is administered. Just like smartphones brought in a whole new, added dimension to phones; smart devices could also bring in a sort of revolution to healthcare delivery and administration.
Another critical area in which smart devices could bring about unimaginably increased efficiency is treatments. At present, one needs to be completely attentive to these regimens. Despite the best attention, it is all but natural to skip a dosage of medicine due to various reasons. Smart devices address this issue by being an alarm system which reminds the patient to take a particular medicine at a particular time of the day.
There is yet another way in which smart devices could impact the way in which medical care is offered. We are already seeing the birth of smart insulin pumps. Implanted into the patient's body; these are small devices that carry with them a certain dose of insulin, monitor the exact sugar levels in a patient, and administer the required insulin supply according to the patient's need, all without the patient even being aware of it.
© 2024 Created by CC-Conrad Clyburn-MedForeSight. Powered by
You need to be a member of MedTech I.Q. to add comments!
Join MedTech I.Q.