Scientists Reinvent Medical Diagnostic Testing

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Zurich, Switzerland (Scicasts) - Scientists have created a one-step point-of-care-diagnostic test, based on an innovative silicon chip, that requires less sample volume, is significantly faster, portable, easy to use, and can test for many diseases, including one of world's leading causes of death, cardiovascular disease. The results are so quick and accurate that a small sample of a patient’s serum or blood, could be tested immediately following a heart attack, to enable the doctor to quickly take a course of action to help the patient survive.

Toumaz Technology Announces Availability of Sensium Life Pebble

Toumaz Technology Announces Availability of Sensium Life Pebble

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Abingdon, UK (Scicasts) - Toumaz Technology, a provider of ultra-low power wireless infrastructure for body monitoring solutions, has announced availability of the Sensium Life Pebble – a non-intrusive, body-worn wireless vital signs monitor that delivers real-time, high-quality data for healthcare applications.

Robot Scientist Discovers New Scientific Knowledge

Robot Scientist Discovers New Scientific Knowledge

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Cambridge, UK (OBBeC) - According to a report from the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC), scientists funded by the council have created a Robot Scientist which the researchers believe is the first machine to have independently discovered new scientific knowledge. The robot, called Adam, is a computer system that fully automates the scientific process.
Perceptive Informatics Reaches Key Milestone



Perceptive Informatics Reaches Key Milestone



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Boston, MA (OBBeC) - Perceptive Informatics, a provider of eClinical solutions and a subsidiary of PAREXEL International Corporation, has announced that it has reached a key milestone, with 10 million calls placed through its ClinPhone Interactive Voice Response System (IVRS) over the past seven years in support of clients’ clinical trials.
Pfizer Selects Exco InTouch for use in Clinical Trials

Pfizer Selects Exco InTouch for use in Clinical Trials

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Essex, UK (OBBeC) - Exco InTouch, a mobile messaging provider for the pharmaceutical industry, has announced that its text messaging technology ATLAS has been selected by the pharmaceutical company Pfizer to enhance the efficacy of its patient recruitment and retention in Phase I clinical trials.
Telemedicine: The Next Step in Healthcare

Telemedicine: The Next Step in Healthcare

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Imagine a scenario where doctors from different hospitals can collaborate on a surgery without having to actually be in the operating room. What if doctors in remote locations could receive immediate expert support from top specialists in hospitals around the world?
Crossing the Digital Divide

Crossing the Digital Divide

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Portland, OR (OBBeC) - What will motivate the elderly, the chronically ill and the medically underserved to use interactive information technology systems to actively help manage their own health problems? What barriers have prevented people in these groups from using such systems more widely than they have?
Outsourcing IT May Be Beneficial to Rural Hospitals

Outsourcing IT May Be Beneficial to Rural Hospitals

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Pennsylvania (OBBeC) - Patients expect the most up-to-date equipment and technology at hospitals, regardless of the institution's size or budget. Providing that technology, however, can be difficult for small, rural hospitals that often lack the budget and staffing to make it possible.
NHS Trusts Connect with InterSystems Ensemble

NHS Trusts Connect with InterSystems Ensemble

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Cambridge, MA (OBBeC) - InterSystems Corporation has unveiled that the InterSystems Ensemble rapid integration platform is now available to the North, Midlands and East of England (NME) Trusts under the NHS National Programme for IT (NPfIT). Ensemble is being delivered by CSC, the Local System Provider for NME, as the standard Trust Integration Engine (TIE) for integrating new solutions with existing applications provided by CSC.

According to the announcement, one of the first Strategic Health Authorities (SHA) who will benefit from the contract is Yorkshire and the Humber.

Phil Molyneux, CIO, NHS Yorkshire and the Humber said, “This agreement between CSC and InterSystems is part of the Local Service Provider contract and is great news for our Trusts. It fits with our strategy to take advantage of new strategic solutions from CSC whilst maximizing the benefit that we can get from existing software products that are highly valued by the local Trusts.”

The Ensemble TIE will include pre-built and pre-tested interfaces for key Trust-based applications. In addition, Trusts have the option to expand their use of Ensemble beyond the TIE to address other Trust integration requirements. Trust and SHA representatives from the NME are collaborating at the NHS Connecting for Health (CfH) Trust Integration Forum to agree on which of their existing applications require Ensemble TIE interfaces. CSC and InterSystems are working with the vendors of those applications to configure and test interfaces to the CSC-hosted applications.

“Proven, comprehensive and extensible integration is vital to the success of the NPfIT programme,” said Mike Dyer, CSC’s NHS Chief Technology Officer. “Our new TIE initiative directly addresses the need to achieve a single view of a patient record and keep disparate systems synchronized.”
Improving Health Through Cell Phones

Improving Health Through Cell Phones

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Los Angeles, CA (OBBeC) - According to a report from the University of California – Los Angeles, researchers at the institute have advanced a novel lens-free, high-throughput imaging technique for potential use in the creation of medical diagnostic applications small enough to fit into objects such as cell phones.

This, according to the report, could be a possible solution to problems such as those faced by many Third World and developing countries, where the distance between people in need of health care and the facilities capable of providing it constitutes a major obstacle to improving health.

This development promises to to improve global disease monitoring, especially in resource-limited settings such as in Africa.

The research, which will be published in the quarterly journal Cellular and Molecular Bioengineering (CMBE) and is currently available online, outlines improvements to a technique known as LUCAS, or Lensless Ultra-wide-field Cell monitoring Array platform based on Shadow imaging.

First published in the Royal Society of Chemistry's journal Lab Chip in 2007, the LUCAS technique, developed by UCLA researchers, demonstrated a lens-free method for quickly and accurately counting targeted cell types in a homogenous cell solution. Removing the lens from the imaging process allows LUCAS to be scaled down to the point that it can eventually be integrated into a regular wireless cell phone. Samples could be loaded into a specially equipped phone using a disposable microfluidic chip.

The UCLA researchers have now improved the LUCAS technique to the point that it can classify a significantly larger sample volume than previously shown — up to 5 millilitres, from an earlier volume of less than 0.1 ml — representing a major step toward portable medical diagnostic applications.

The research team, led by Aydogan Ozcan, assistant professor of electrical engineering at the UCLA Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science and a member of the California NanoSystems Institute (CNSI), includes postdoctoral scholar Sungkyu Seo, doctoral student Ting-Wei Su, master's student Derek Tseng and undergraduate Anthony Erlinger.

Ozcan envisions people one day being able to draw a blood sample into a chip the size of a quarter, which could then be inserted into a LUCAS-equipped cell phone that would quickly identify and count the cells within the sample. The read-out could be sent wirelessly to a hospital for further analysis.

"This on-chip imaging platform may have a significant impact, especially for medical diagnostic applications related to global health problems such as HIV or malaria monitoring," Ozcan said.

LUCAS functions as an imaging scheme in which the shadow of each cell in an entire sample volume is detected in less than a second. The acquired shadow image is then digitally processed using a custom-developed "decision algorithm" to enable both the identification of the cell/bacteria location in 3-D and the classification of each microparticle type within the sample volume.

Various cell types — such as red blood cells, fibroblasts and hepatocytes — or other microparticles, such as bacteria, all exhibit uniquely different shadow patterns and therefore can be rapidly identified using the decision algorithm.

The new study demonstrates that the use of narrowband, short-wavelength illumination significantly improves the detection of cell shadow images. Furthermore, by varying the wavelength, the two-dimensional pattern of the recorded cell signatures can be tuned to enable automated identification and counting of a target cell type within a mixed cell solution.

"This is the first demonstration of automated, lens-free counting and characterization of a mixed, or heterogeneous, cell solution on a chip and holds significant promise for telemedicine applications," Ozcan said.

Another improvement detailed in the UCLA research is the creation of a hybrid imaging scheme that combines two different wavelengths to further improve the digital quality of shadow images. This new cell classification scheme has been termed "multicolor LUCAS." As the team illustrated, further improvement in image quality can also be achieved through the use of adaptive digital filtering. As result of these upgrades, the volume of the sample solution that can be imaged has been increased, as mentioned, from less than 0.1 ml to 5 ml.

"This is a significant advance in the quest to bring advanced medical care to all reaches of the planet," said Leonard H. Rome, interim director of the CNSI and senior associate dean for research at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA. "The implications for medical diagnostic applications are in keeping with CNSI initiatives for new advances toward improving global health."

Ozcan has already received accolades for this research, including the prestigious 2008 Okawa Foundation Research Award, which he will receive at a ceremony in San Francisco on Oct. 8. The award honours top young researchers working in the fields of information and telecommunications.
Researchers Develop Tiny 3-D Ultrasound Probe

Researchers Develop Tiny 3-D Ultrasound Probe

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According to a report from Duke University, biomedical engineers at the institute have designed and fabricated a novel ultrasound probe which is powerful enough to provide detailed,3-D images. The probe is small enough to ride along at the tip of a catheter and can provide physicians with clearer real-time images of soft tissue without the risks associated with conventional x-ray catheter guidance.

IBM and University of Ontario Institute of Technology Collaborate to Help Doctors Caring for Premature Babies

IBM and University of Ontario Institute of Technology Collaborate to Help Doctors Caring for Premature Babies

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Armonk, NY and Toronto (OBBeC) -  IBM and the University of Ontario Institute of Technology (UOIT) have announced, what they claim to be, a first-of-a-kind research project to help doctors detect subtle changes in the condition of critically ill premature babies.

The project led by Dr. Carolyn McGregor, a UOIT associate professor and Canada Research Chair in Health Informatics, will utilize advanced stream computing software developed by IBM Research to work toward greatly enhancing the decision-making capabilities of doctors. The software ingests a constant stream of biomedical data, such as heart rate and respiration, along with environmental data gathered from advanced sensors and more traditional monitoring equipment on and around the babies.

The researchers will also use the software to apply findings from Dr. McGregor's body of research to help make "sense" of the data and, in near-real-time, feed back the resulting analysis to health-care professionals so they can predict potential changes in an infant's condition with greater accuracy and intervene more quickly.

Physicians in neonatal intensive care units (NICU) at Toronto's Hospital for Sick Children and two other international hospitals are participating in the study.

Monitoring "preemies" as a patient group is especially important as certain life-threatening conditions such as infection can be detected up to 24 hours in advance by observing changes in physiological data streams.

The type of information that will come out of the research project is not available today. Currently, physicians monitoring preemies rely on a paper-based process that involves manually looking at the readings from various monitors and getting feedback from the nurses providing care.

"This research has the potential to greatly impact neonatal care through reduced mortality and morbidity rates and overall health-care costs," said Dr. McGregor. "By merging our research and technology, we are able to collect more detailed patient data in a systematic manner, do online health analysis and decision support, and get advanced early warning of emerging patterns that could predict a medical event."

When fully developed, IBM's software will be capable of processing the 512 readings per second generated by some of these medical devices, and UOIT researchers will further test and develop its ability to analyze these vast quantities of data in real time.

Initially researchers will use NICU medical devices in UOIT's state-of-the-art Health Informatics Laboratory to test IBM's software using simulated patient mirroring data. Then the software will be tested using de-identified actual patient data. The de-identified data is recorded in a way that enables researchers to alter some variables, play it back and run simulations for further study.

According to the announcement, IBM awarded Dr. McGregor access to the prototype software patented by researchers at its T.J. Watson research facility in New York under its First-of-a-Kind program, which is designed to accelerate the delivery of innovative technologies to the market and link IBM's research work to real world problems.

"Right now, there is an enormous amount of critical data produced by machines monitoring patients," said Don Aldridge, business executive for IBM research and life science. "That creates a challenge. The ability to quickly analyze that data and make informed decisions will help improve the overall quality of health care."

Scientists Develop Tongue Driven Wheelchair

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Atlanta, Georgia (OBBeC) - Engineers at the Georgia Institute of Technology have devised a new a assistive technology that they believe could help the severely disabled lead more independent lives. According to the report from the institute, the novel system allows individuals with disabilities to operate a computer, control a powered wheelchair and interact with their environments simply by moving their tongues.

"This device could revolutionize the field of assistive technologies by helping individuals with severe disabilities, such as those with high-level spinal cord injuries, return to rich, active, independent and productive lives," said Maysam Ghovanloo, an assistant professor in the Georgia Tech School of Electrical and Computer Engineering. Ghovanloo developed the system with graduate student Xueliang Huo.

The tongue-operated assistive technology, called the Tongue Drive system, was described on June 29 at the 2008 Rehabilitation Engineering and Assistive Technology Society of North America (RESNA) Annual Conference in Washington, D.C. An article about this system is also scheduled to appear in an upcoming issue of the Journal of Rehabilitation Research and Development.

To operate the Tongue Drive system, potential users only need to be able to move their tongues. Attaching a small magnet, the size of a grain of rice, to an individual's tongue by implantation, piercing or tissue adhesive allows tongue motion to direct the movement of a cursor across a computer screen or a powered wheelchair around a room.

"We chose the tongue to operate the system because unlike hands and feet, which are controlled by the brain through the spinal cord, the tongue is directly connected to the brain by a cranial nerve that generally escapes damage in severe spinal cord injuries or neuromuscular diseases," said Ghovanloo, who started working on this project about three years ago at North Carolina State University. "Tongue movements are also fast, accurate and do not require much thinking, concentration or effort."

Movement of the magnetic tracer attached to the tongue is detected by an array of magnetic field sensors mounted on a headset outside the mouth or on an orthodontic brace inside the mouth. The sensor output signals are wirelessly transmitted to a portable computer, which can be carried on the user's clothing or wheelchair.

The sensor output signals are processed to determine the relative motion of the magnet with respect to the array of sensors in real-time. This information is then used to control the movements of a cursor on the computer screen or to substitute for the joystick function in a powered wheelchair.

The system can potentially capture a large number of tongue movements, each of which can represent a different user command. A unique set of specific tongue movements can be tailored for each individual based on the user's abilities, oral anatomy, personal preferences and lifestyle.

"An individual could potentially train our system to recognize touching each tooth as a different command," explained Ghovanloo. "The ability to train our system with as many commands as an individual can comfortably remember is a significant advantage over the common sip-n-puff device that acts as a simple switch controlled by sucking or blowing through a straw."

As per the report, the Tongue Drive system is also non-invasive and does not require brain surgery like some of the brain-computer interface technologies.

Ghovanloo's group recently completed trials in which six able-bodied individuals tested the Tongue Drive system. Each participant defined six tongue commands that would substitute for computer mouse tasks – left, right, up and down pointer movements and single- and double-click. For each trial, the individual began by training the system. During the five-minute training session, the individual repeated each of the six designated tongue movements 10 times.

During the testing session, the user moved his or her tongue to one of the predefined command positions and the mouse pointer started moving in the selected direction. To move the cursor faster, users could hold their tongue in the position of the issued command to gradually accelerate the pointer until it reached a maximum velocity.

Results of the computer access test by novice users with the current Tongue Drive prototype showed a response time of less than one second with almost 100 percent accuracy for the six individual commands. This is equivalent to an information transfer rate of approximately 150 bits per minute, which is much faster than the bandwidth of most brain-computer interfaces, according to Ghovanloo.

The researchers have also tested the ability of twelve able-bodied individuals to operate an electric-powered wheelchair with the Tongue Drive system. The next step is to test and assess the usability and acceptability of the system by people with severe disabilities, said Ghovanloo. He is teaming with the Shepherd Centre, an Atlanta-based catastrophic care hospital, and the Georgia Tech Centre for Assistive Technology and Environmental Access, to conduct those trials.

The research team has also begun to develop software to connect the Tongue Drive system to a wide variety of readily available communication tools such as text generators, speech synthesizers and readers. In addition, the researchers plan to add control commands, such as switching the system into standby mode to permit the user to eat, sleep or engage in a conversation while extending battery life.

"We hope this technology will reduce the need of individuals with severe disabilities to receive continuous assistance from family members or caregivers, thus significantly reducing healthcare and assistance costs," noted Ghovanloo.

Scientists Visualize Gene Regulation in Living Cells

Scientists Visualize Gene Regulation in Living Cells

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Bethesda, MD (OBBeC) - A team of researchers has used advanced imaging methods and computer simulations to be able to glance at the regulation of a cancer-related gene in a living cell. The team led by scientists at the National Cancer Institute (NCI), part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), found that the efficiency with which the components of the cell's gene reading machinery come together has an impact on gene expression, the process by which a gene translates its information into a new protein.

The findings, published in the May 23, 2008 issue of Molecular Cell, shed new light on the means by which living cells regulate gene activity.

"Each new discovery in the realm of gene regulation gives us a fuller appreciation of how a cell controls the expression of its own genetic program," said NCI Director, Dr John E. Niederhuber. "These findings remind us that the puzzle is not yet complete, that there are nuances to how genes are translated that we do not yet completely understand."

A key question regarding how the cell controls gene expression relates to interactions between genes and certain gene reading proteins, and between genes and transcription factors, which regulate gene transcription from DNA to RNA. The process requires the assembly of numerous transcription complexes, particularly one called RNA polymerase, at the site of a gene's promoter (the stretch of DNA before the start of a gene to which transcription factors bind) at the right time.

From earlier work done primarily by NCI researchers, the interactions among transcription factors, and between them and their target DNA, is known to be highly dynamic. What has remained unclear is whether this dynamic nature itself serves some role in regulating gene activity.

To understand the regulatory implications of this dynamism, a team of scientists probed the relationships between a large gene-reading complex known as RNA pol I and genes that encode ribosomal RNAs (rRNAs), which are key components of the cell's protein manufacturing machinery. The rRNA genes are excellent models for studying the dynamics of regulation because their transcription factors are well known, and their interactions with RNA pol I can be visualized using quantitative live-cell fluorescent microscopy, a sophisticated technique for analyzing the activities of proteins and genes in living cells in real-time.

The group's data suggest that there is indeed a regulatory role for these dynamic relationships. RNA pol I is not a single protein but rather a complex of subunits that assemble into the full polymerase when needed. According to the researchers' observations, as the cell increases rRNA production, some of the subunits associate more stably with the gene and assemble active and complete RNA pol I complexes more efficiently. As a result, the cell's production of rRNA increases.

The scientists then interfered with the interactions between the RNA pol I subunits and another transcription factor, thereby mimicking the conditions of a cell that was able to produce rRNA at a high rate. As a result, the efficiency of RNA pol I assembly and the pace of rRNA output both decreased dramatically.

The findings suggest that the efficiency with which the RNA pol I complex assembles all its subunits--which is controlled by a dynamic interplay of polymerase and non-polymerase transcription factors-- plays a significant role in determining when a given gene is turned on. While the group looked only at RNA polymerase I, other research suggests that the phenomena they observed may represent a general mechanism for regulating gene transcription.
Klinikum Chemnitz Links Teleradiology Service with EHR

Klinikum Chemnitz Links Teleradiology Service with EHR

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Germany (OBBeC) - According to a report today from Siemens, Klinikum Chemnitz gGmbH has become one of the first hospitals in Germany to link its teleradiology service with the electronic health record (EHR).

This means that, effective immediately, data obtained from a remote diagnosis, e.g. computed tomography images and the corresponding findings, can be stored in a shared health record and then used for information exchange between different facilities participating in the patient's treatment.

The overall technical solution was supplied and implemented by Siemens. This included the software for the radiological image communication as well as the Soarian Integrated Care (Soarian IC) eHealth solution for the electronic health record.

In teleradiology, a hospital electronically transmits X-ray exposures from imaging techniques to a specialist who is not located at the site of the examination. The specialist then transmits his findings, again by means of data communication. Klinikum Chemnitz gGmbH utilizes this radiological image communication to provide, among other things, diagnostic resources and medical expertise to county hospitals, medical centres and practicing physicians. Close cooperation has already been practiced for some time in this region, especially in the fields of neurosurgery, traumatology, angiology and radiology.

If, for example, a patient is delivered to a county hospital following an emergency, a diagnosis can be performed via computed tomography without always having to have a specialized expert on site. The expert responsible for Klinikum Chemnitz receives the image dataset electronically and returns his findings to the requesting unit. Over 1600 datasets were thus transmitted during 2007 alone. With the help of Soarian IC, this data can now also be stored in a long-term health record.

"As one of the largest hospitals in Germany and due to its wide performance spectrum and staff of medical specialists, Klinikum Chemnitz is an important partner for the hospitals in the region. Via telemedicine, we can also make this knowledge accessible outside of the clinic, i.e. across institutional borders. This offers cost-cutting potentials to the entire network and provides the patient with healthcare close to home with fewer relocations", said Prof. Dr.-Ing. Olaf Schlimpert, head of the Medical Information Technology Dept. at Klinikum Chemnitz. "In the future, not only institutional borders, but also the interfaces between outpatient, inpatient, and rehab treatment will disappear altogether. Siemens is also the partner that can support these new trends over the long term with eHealth solutions."

"Optimal communication between all participants is a basic requirement for smooth workflows in cooperations between service providers, said Volker Wetekam, Chief Executive Officer of Global Solutions, Siemens Healthcare. "With Soarian Integrated Care, we were able to offer Klinikum Chemnitz a solution for a single communications
and IT platform for transsectoral cooperation."

The demographic and administrative data of a patient receiving treatment at various medical facilities can be managed in the electronic health record (EHR). The patient's medical data are saved either with or without case management. Whereas images and results from remote diagnosis previously had to be printed out and filed in paper records, all data now automatically flows from telediagnostics into an EHR, provided that the patient consents to this process. A special security concept ensures that the data is accessible only to authorized persons.
Researchers Develop Tool to Help Battle Bird Flu

Researchers Develop Tool to Help Battle Bird Flu

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Los Alamos, N.M. (OBBeC) – Researchers at Los Alamos National Laboratory have developed a mathematical tool that could help health experts and crisis managers determine in real time whether an emerging infectious disease such as avian influenza H5N1 is poised to spread globally.

In a paper published recently in the Public Library of Science, researchers Luís Bettencourt and Ruy Ribeiro of Los Alamos’ Theoretical Division describe a novel approach to reading subtle changes in epidemiological data to gain insight into whether something like the H5N1 strain of avian influenza—commonly known these days as the “Bird Flu”—has gained the ability to touch off a deadly global pandemic.

“What we wanted to create was a mathematically rigourous way to account for changes in transmissibility,” said Bettencourt. “We now have a tool that will tell us in the very short term what is happening based on anomaly detection. What this method won’t tell you is what’s going to happen five years from now.”

According to the press report, the researchers set out to create a “smart methodology” to look at changes in disease transmissibility that did not require mounds of epidemiological surveillance data for accuracy. The ability to look at small disease populations in real time could allow responders and health experts to implement quarantine policies and provide medical resources to key areas early on in an emerging pandemic and possibly stem the spread.

Bettencourt and Ribeiro developed an extension of standard epidemiological models that describes the probability of disease spread among a given population. The model then takes into account actual disease surveillance data gathered by health experts like the World Health Organization and looks for anomalies in the expected transmission rate versus the actual one. Based on this, the model provides health experts actual transmission probabilities for the disease. Unlike other statistical models that require huge amounts of data for accuracy, the Los Alamos tool works on very small populations such as a handful of infected people in a remote village, outlines the report.

After developing their Bayesian estimation of epidemic potential, Bettencourt went back and looked at actual epidemiological surveillance data collected during Bird Flu outbreaks in certain parts of the world. Their model accurately portrayed actual transmission scenarios, lending confidence to its methodology.

In addition to its utility in understanding the transmissibility of emerging diseases, the new method is also advantageous because it allows public health experts to study outbreaks of more common ailments such as seasonal influenza early on. This can assist medical professionals in making better estimates of potential morbidity and mortality, along with assessments of intervention strategies and resource allocations that can help a population better cope with a developing seasonal outbreak.

“We are closing the loop on science-based prediction of transmission consequences in real time,” said Ribeiro. “A program of this type is something that needs to be implemented at a worldwide level to provide an integrated way to respond a priori to an emerging disease threat.”
Researchers Propose Remote-control Health System

Researchers Propose Remote-control Health System

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Japan (OBBeC) - Akio Koyama of Yamagata University, Japan, and colleagues there and at Yamagata College of Industry and Technology, and Fukuoka Institute of Technology, have drafted a proposal for a remote healthcare system with three main functions. The first function acts as a multipoint communication system with video images and voice. The second automatically uploads vital signs data and referencing. The third function involves remote monitoring of drip infusions that provide the patient with a controlled supply of medication or nutrients. According to the announcement from the university, the team has already carried out successful field trials with their prototype remote medical care support centre.

The researchers point out that their system could address some of important socioeconomic problems, such as providing quality medical care for all citizens, even those living in small towns and rural areas.

Currently, access to sophisticated healthcare is often restricted to those in major conurbations and people in sparsely populated areas are usually required to seek healthcare some distance from their homes. "These trips can require hours of travel time for a relatively short examination, and thus are neither convenient nor an efficient use of the patient's time," says the team. Conversely, having healthcare workers with specialist knowledge travel to remote areas is equally wasteful of resources at various levels. The optimum solution, the team says, is to provide a medical consultancy solution using information and communications technology.

As per the announcement, the proposed remote system brings together technologies that allow video conferencing between patient or local carer and healthcare workers, which also allows medical care data to be uploaded to a database. The vital signs data uploading and referencing subsystem likewise would operate via the Internet or via cellular phone and allow a remote doctor to advise local carers on patient requirements. Finally, a subsystem that monitors the progress of a drip infusion using a sensor network would notify remote nursing staff of further requirements, which could then be passed on to a local carer.

There are several technical aspects of the proposed system that require attention prior to such a remote medical care approach being widely adopted, the researchers add. For instance, delays and throughput of video transfer during communications must be improved as well as diagnosis accuracy of the doctor agent and the prediction accuracy of the drip infusion finishing time.