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In the past two years, there has been a great leap forward in mobile medical technology, primarily catalyzed by the introduction of iPads. About 75 percent of US physicians now own an iOS device, according to a Manhattan Research study(Opens in a new window) released last year, and they are increasingly using them professionally.
There are ample reasons why iPads should replace physician’s clipboards. The iPad is more adaptable, portable, and dramatically more affordable than the medical equipment it’s capable of replacing. It’s even been proven to increase the efficiency(Opens in a new window) of resident physicians.
While Android- and Windows-powered tablets and smartphones are certainly as capable as their iOS counterparts, they haven’t had as successful medical careers. Part of the credit goes to Afshad Mistri, Apple’s medical market manager. Early in his career, Mistri was an applications engineer on the Tomahawk Cruise Missile program and now he’s just as focused(Opens in a new window) on making the iPad an intermediary in the medical device market. That middleman role is an important distinction; the iPad skirts the line of medical devices since it’s the apps themselves, not the iPad, that need FDA approval to be used by the medical profession. And that’s how Apple wants it. FDA classification of the iPad would subject not just the iPad but also Apple to a set of byzantine rules and regulations(Opens in a new window) that could easily stand in the way of innovation.
Physicians are developing their own iOS-centric devices and also have at their disposal a Mistri-developed section on iTunes(Opens in a new window) for healthcare professionals that offers them selections for reference, education, emergency medical record and patient monitoring, imaging, and point of care.
For their part, patients are eager for electronic solutions to monitor conditions and transmit information to their physicians; 61 percent of respondents to Deloitte’s 2011 Survey of Health Care Consumers in the United States(Opens in a new window) expressed the desire to do so. In the United Kingdom, there’s even a list of apps that the government urges physicians to prescribe(Opens in a new window) to their patients.
The apps we’re featuring here are beneficial to both physicians and those they treat. Like medicine itself, advances are being made every day.
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The AliveCor iPhone ECG puts the same diagnostic tool in a physician’s pocket. The AliveCor is an iPhone 4 case that turns the phone into a “wireless, clinical-quality cardiac event recorder.” The case has two oblong metal bumps on the back that are the electrodes, which can be placed on the chest or simply held in the hand. In conjunction with an app, the AliveCor iPhone ECG(Opens in a new window) can analyze, wirelessly transmit, and store an ECG reading for an immediate diagnosis. AliveCor has also developed an iCard ECG that can be adhered to other iOS devices and that serves the same function. The AliveCor iPhone ECG and the iCard ECG have not yet been cleared for sale as medical devices by the FDA in the United States but Qualcomm, which is backing AliveCor, is using a similar technology in underserved clinics in China(Opens in a new window). Eric Topol, MD, one of the physicians testing the AliveCor iPhone ECG and the director of the Scripps Translational Science Institute, used it to help determine that a passenger on a flight he recently took was having a heart attack, prompting the pilot to make an emergency landing so that the passenger could be taken to a hospital.
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3. iMicroscope
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5. Dr. Google
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9. FaceTime
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Source link : https://www.pcmag.com/news/9-new-life-saving-technologies-for-doctors