

During the COVID-19 crisis, digital forces like artificial intelligence have assisted the healthcare industry to focus on patient care while achieving improved efficiency during treatments.
During the COVID-19 crisis, digital forces like artificial intelligence have assisted the healthcare industry to focus on patient care while achieving improved efficiency during treatments.
Devices by themselves don’t improve outcomes. Better lifestyle integration is key to driving changes in patient compliance—embedding sensors into the sorts of devices people can use every day to increase opportunities for passive biometric capture and to facilitate therapeutics.
GI Genius is based on machine learning and helps clinicians detect lesions in real time during a colonoscopy.
Increased access to care is a vital part of the vision to innovate the delivery of healthcare.
Data, IoT, artificial intelligence, predictive analytics, virtual and augmented reality, and many other technologies will fuel the healthcare system.
The normalization of digital healthcare will go a long way toward driving uptake of new technologies.
RPM products with medical-grade sensors can play a dynamic role in developing personalized medicine.
The test generates results within 20 minutes and can be used by adults and children over the age of two years old.
As restrictions lift and in-person visits become viable again, the use of virtual care technology — particularly telemedicine and remote patient monitoring (RPM)—is here to stay.
In this series we examine the future of the medical device industry—from manufacturing to the consumer-patient experience.