Dr. Touch: exactly like what you think, except not at all

August 29th, 2008 by

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Dr. Touch will soothe your HMO pains

The age of the house call is long gone, and until we manage to replace all our bodily organs with cybernetic proxies, medical gadgets are our only hope to minimize those pesky office visits. The Health PHS5000 (aka Dr. Touch) from LG and Intel isn’t the first of its kind, but it is the latest such device, and it’s been recently introduced exclusively in Japan to begin medical trials. The little white box with a friendly UI (smileys mean you’re not dead yet, we presume) can track things like blood pressure and sugar levels, and will even send reports to your doctor’s office — meaning your terminal laziness can reach astronomical new heights… er, lows. It’s perfect for the disabled or merely reclusive, and with any luck will be hacked soon to allow Wii Fit integration.

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Posted in Intel, lg, healthcare, doctor, dr touch, DrTouch, health care, hmo, Intel Health PHS5000, IntelHealthPhs5000 | No Comments »

RFID “virtual walls” could keep tabs on hospital assets

May 25th, 2008 by

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RFID has long since been a pretty common find in your modern day hospital, but now GE and CenTrak are teaming up to make the technology even more useful in those long, winding hallways. Simply hailed as RFID “virtual walls,” the creation enables venues to “track tagged mobile medical equipment down to a portion of a single room.” By providing sub-room-level distinction, personnel can locate hardware within a monitored area as tiny as 6- x 8-feet, and although it’ll likely be used to locate cardiac defibrillators and portable ultrasound machines, patients could theoretically be tracked, too. The new tech will be shown off at the Association for the Advancement of Medical Instrumentation (AAMI) Conference in San Jose next week, though there’s no word on how soon the duo will roll this stuff out en masse.

[Via medGadget]

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Posted in rfid, healthcare, ge, tracking, track, hospital, location, CenTrak, intouch care, IntouchCare, rtls, virtual wall, VirtualWall | No Comments »

White space networking could disrupt hospital telemetry systems

April 28th, 2008 by

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The stumbling blocks keep piling up as the white space networking struggles to get off the ground: it looks like the manufacturers of healthcare equipment are set to join NAB in opposing the technology. Wireless medical telemetry devices like heart monitors have been operating in broadcast white spaces since the late 80s, and manufacturers like GE Healthcare say that the Microsoft- and Google-backed white space networking initiative could potentially “directly interfere” and “prevent patient monitoring.” For its part, the FCC has set aside all of channel 37 for medical telemetry devices in 1998 after interference from a nearby TV station shut down the system at Baylor University Medical Center, but it wasn’t mandatory, and hospitals that haven’t made the switch could face millions of dollars in upgrade costs. That’s not say that medical telemetry concerns are a problem that can’t be solved — the new Google push includes a channel 37 exception, for example, and there are some other compromise solutions on the table — but it’s seems like there’s no end of issues for a technology that hasn’t really even been demonstrated working yet.

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Posted in healthcare, hospital, white space, WhiteSpace, hospitals, white space internet, WhiteSpaceInternet, ge healthcare, GeHealthcare, medical telemetry, MedicalTelemetry, white space networking, WhiteSpaceNetworking | No Comments »

Omron’s Okao Catch measures the intensity of your smile

April 12th, 2008 by

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It was inevitable, really. Not even two months after jolly researchers at Kansai University developed a machine to calculate the quantity of a person’s laughter comes a new method of measuring just how hard you’re cheesing. According to Omron’s Yasushi Kawamoto, the Okao Catch technology is able to closely analyze “the curves of the lips, eye movement and other facial characteristics to decide how much a person is smiling.” In a recent demonstration, it threw up percentages as people moved in front of a camcorder and began to grin, and while a somber individual did net an astounding score of zero, it doesn’t seem that negative numbers are doled out for frowners. Besides being incredibly novel, the creators are hoping that it can be used in the medical field for accurately judging the “emotional state of patients,” in robotics for helping androids “decipher human reactions” and in dressing rooms assisting B-list celebs improve their charm.

[Via Tarakash]

 

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Posted in japan, software, healthcare, medical, smile, Okao Catch, OkaoCatch, Omron, smile-measuring | No Comments »

RTX Telehealth Monitor keeps you in contact with your doctor

November 19th, 2007 by

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We’ve seen a few remote health monitor concepts, but they all seem like overkill compared to RTX’s Telehealth Monitor, which strips things down to the basics. The device wirelessly connects to a range of sensors like blood glucose monitors, scales, and and blood pressure monitors, and sends data to healthcare providers over a phone line connection. In addition, the unit can be programmed to ask diagnostic questions, give dosage reminders, and communicate other information from doctor to patient. Intriguing, but come on — not even our grandparents have landlines anymore.

[Via MedGadget]

 

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Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

Posted in health, healthcare, medicine, rtx, telehealth, telehealth monitor, TelehealthMonitor | No Comments »

Air-driven robotic legs hop, skip and jump

September 28th, 2007 by

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Though we’ve certainly seen robotic legs that like to get their jump on, a team of researchers at the University of Tokyo have assembled a new two-legged creature that can actually spring up about 50-centimeters on its own — and land gracefully. The creation is part of a larger project aimed at creating humanoids with cat-like (or just human-like, really) reflexes that can better assist the elderly when used as caregivers. Moreover, this hopper relies on air-driven artificial muscles rather than electric motors, and while we’re not sure it could hang with Ronaldinho, it can boot a fútbol when asked.

 

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Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

Posted in university, japan, humanoid, research, health, healthcare, home health, home healthcare, HomeHealth, HomeHealthcare, jumping, medical, muscles, Squat-Jumping, University of Tokyo, UniversityOfTokyo | No Comments »

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