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Medical Devices

By Bill Siwicki | 01:06 pm | July 08, 2019
At North Suburban Cardiology Associates in Stoneham, Massachusetts, there were several gaps in the group’s ambulatory ECG monitoring capability.
By Nathan Eddy | 12:51 pm | July 05, 2019
A Frost & Sullivan report predicts that as many as 45% of ORs will be integrated with intelligent technologies within the next four years to improve the precision and predictability of surgical services.
By Benjamin Harris | 03:24 pm | July 01, 2019
The agency warns that older MiniMed devices – which have been recalled by Medtronic – could be hacked and remotely controlled, adding to the list of cyber concerns for IoT devices.
By Bill Siwicki | 04:32 pm | June 26, 2019
Three medical device technology experts from GE Healthcare, BioSig Technologies and Advantech offer comprehensive advice on best practices for healthcare organizations launching new medical devices.
By Nathan Eddy | 11:09 am | June 26, 2019
With remote patient monitoring a hot topic among healthcare providers, a new survey indicates patients would be open to outfitting themselves with wearable devices if it resulted in fewer trips to visit the doctor.
By HIMSS TV | 05:45 pm | June 24, 2019
Kotona At Home is a remote delivery care treatment center whose goal is to give people the means to live at home longer.
By Nathan Eddy | 01:08 pm | June 14, 2019
Bad actors can use the Becton, Dickinson and Company Alaris Gateway Workstations to “authenticate” malicious and potentially dangerous content, CyberMDX discovered.
By HIMSS TV | 10:22 am | June 14, 2019
StethoMe CEO and co-founder Wojciech Radomski discusses his company's EC2VC-winning smart stethoscope and why AI is crucial in an era where more and more digital health devices are found in the home.
By HIMSS TV | 06:20 am | June 14, 2019
Friedrich Lämmel, CEO of EC2VC pitch competition winner Thryve, talks about the future of digital health startups as mature technologies push the boundaries of the market and user base.
By Nathan Eddy | 12:52 pm | June 12, 2019
Use of an inhaler-connected sensor helped push the average number of COPD-related hospital trips down to an average of 2.2, compared to the year prior to study enrollment when the average was 3.4 trips to the hospital.