Merck & Co. and Healthy Interactions alliance’s Map4health, a new digital and mobile service catering to diabetes patients, is designed for connecting patients with doctors to educate and help them between clinic visits.
Natural Cycles’ ad branding it as a "highly accurate contraceptive app" and a "clinically tested alternative to birth control methods" was banned by the UK’s Advertising Standards Authority (ASA).
Among the umpteen fitness trackers available on the market, Drugdu.com presents the hi-tech best quality FDA and CE standard Chest Strap ECG Heart Rate Monitor Portable Fitness Tracker.
As healthcare sees an emergence of digitalization in reaping the best outcomes in patients and a surge in investments by hospitals in patient-centric mobile apps and software, experts recommend psychiatrists to benefit from the latest technologies which could enhance mental health delivery.
Wearable Medical devices took the world by storm and have altered our way of life forever. In 2016 the market for wearables reached an estimated $2 billion and experts predict that this number will skyrocket to $6 billion by 2023.
Klara, a New York-based healthcare messaging system, just landed another $11.5 million in Series A funding round led by FirstMark Capital in addition to participants like Project A Ventures, Lerer Hippeau, Atlantic Labs, and other investors.
Several top tech companies such as Google, Amazon, Oracle, Microsoft, IBM and Salesforce have vowed to remove barriers which prevent customers from accessing their personal mHealth data whenever they need it. The announcement was made at the Blue Button 2.0 Developer Conference held in Washington D.C.
Resolve Greater Rochester and Rochester Institute of Technology researchers got together to build a new app that helps evaluate a person’s physical and mental health.
Natural Cycles, an app which includes both a contraceptive and a fertility tracker, has again become the target of a regulatory investigation due to various claims made in its advertisements.
A research team from Stanford University School of Medicine created a smartphone app paired with Google Glass eye-wearable to help children with autism interpret emotions via facial expressions and develop communication skills.
Go to Page Go
your submission has already been received.
OK
Please enter a valid Email address!
Submit
The most relevant industry news & insight will be sent to you every two weeks.