The University of Oulu is at the forefront of developing cutting-edge biosensor technology that could revolutionize the early diagnosis and treatment of diseases.
The U.S. health-care system exchanges tens of millions of patient records a day. Thanks to recent technological advances, the ability to analyze such large amounts of data has improved markedly.
The earliest medical-records systems started in academic centers in the 1960s and ’70s. A “health IT” sector emerged about a decade later. By the early 2000s, a series of reports suggested the myriad ...
NZ research funding fuels life-changing medical breakthroughs. This content was prepared by Auckland Medical Research ...
Doctors at Northwestern Medicine say medical innovations helped them achieve two medical milestones last year: the largest ...
The combination of his high-pressure career and his medical condition required vigilant attention. My grandmother, drawing from her background as a nurse, approached each doctor's appointment with the ...
Grants from the National Institutes of Health come with additional money for overhead. A planned $4 billion cut would leave ...
Researchers from the School of Engineering of the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (HKUST) have successfully developed the world's smallest multifunctional biomedical robot ...
A narrow bill would be one of the first attempts in Oregon to regulate the rapidly changing technology that some worry could ...
Breast cancer remains one of the most significant public health challenges in the world, affecting hundreds of thousands of ...
Enovis, a multibillion dollar life sciences company, is expanding operations into Cedar Park, becoming the latest technology ...
Abhishek Pandurang Benke led the development of an innovative cardiovascular diagnostic device, improving accuracy, speed, ...