Skip to Content

AOL Tech

HealthCare posts

Visionaries

U.S. Woman Gets Web-Ready Pacemaker

Carol Kasyjanski has lived with a severe heart condition for 20 years. Until recently, she's lived her life, often in fear, in strict obedience to the condition's limitations. Now, though, a medical breakthrough has given the woman a chance to live her life on her own terms.

Kasyjanski is the first American to receive a wireless-equipped pacemaker, according to Reuters. The device gives her much more freedom, since her doctor can electronically monitor critical information; it's downloaded to his computer at least once a day. If the pacemaker were to stop, or if any stats were abnormal, Dr. Steven Greenberg would be immediately notified via wireless communication, and could act accordingly. Also, the wireless pacemaker allows Kasyjanski to get in and out of the doctor's office much more quickly since Greenberg already has most of the information he needs before meeting with the patient face to face.

Read more →

Web

White House Turns to Internet to Combat "Disinformation"


Barack Obama is no stranger to spurious claims about his heritage, citizenship, and religious beliefs, but most of these claims have been met with little more than stolid dismissal by our secretly Muslim, terrorist-fist-bumping, Kenyan-born president. Start attacking the man's policies with deceptive chain e-mails and viral videos, though, and you might just find yourself on the losing side of a war with the most tech-savvy administration in our nation's history.

Recent weeks have seen the circulation of online videos and e-mails that White House director of new media, Macon Phillips, has called "scary," according to ABC news. These missives claim to "uncover" various details of Obama's health care plan. That it will eliminate private insurance. That everyone of Medicare age will be visited and asked how they wish to die. That elderly Americans will "be put out to pasture."

Read more →

Visionaries

Art Students and Engineers Design Ambulance With Ejector Seats

Ambulance Concepts Feature Ejector Seats, Lack Logic

What do you get when you mix the Royal College of Art in London, the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council, ambulances, and a healthy James Bond obsession? 'Healthcare on the Move: The Smart Pods Project.' Part art show and part conceptual technology pageant, the project envisions what future British ambulances might look like.

One design, for instance, envisioned a rear treatment area that could be detached from the ambulance's cab, left behind for prolonged periods of time, and mechanically expanded to allow more space for Emergency Care Practioners to administer treatment. One concept even called for an ejector seat that could launch a paramedic into a hectic and difficult-to-reach environment.

We'd love to see an ambulance with a "patient cannon" -- a gun at the back that can fire the sick and injured through the doors of an emergency room, eliminating the need to stop and unload patients. It could make emergency medical transport much more efficient. [From: BBC]

Related Links:

Computers

'Paperless' Hospitals Found to Be Safer

There's a constant and ongoing struggle to get hospitals -- and the health industry as a whole -- to modernize and go digital. Many have resisted, thinking that digital records will result in the same leaks of personal information we've seen in the repeated hackings of Monster.com. However, a new study should give those digital supporters a little more ammunition. According to that study, published in the Archives of Internal Medicine, you are 15 percent less likely to die in an all-digital hospital than in one still relying on paper.

The study tracked 41 hospitals in Texas and shows that 100,000 lives could be saved every year if all hospitals upgraded, thanks to a 16 percent reduction in complications during hospital stays. Hopefully, these findings serve as an indication that such upgrades will get pushed through. But in the interim, if you have your choice, you might just want to head to the hospital that has more LCD monitors than clip boards. [From: Reuters]

Related Links:

Computers

Medicare Offering Bonuses to Doctors Who Use E-Prescriptions

Medicare Offering Bonuses to Doctors Who Use E-PrescriptionsDoctors are being offered an incentive by Medicare to start ditching old paper prescriptions in favor of electronic ones. The expectation is that e-prescriptions will reduce costs and minimize mistakes due to doctors' notoriously terrible hand writing.

Starting January 1st of 2009, doctors will start receiving bonuses for using e-prescriptions, which are accepted by 80-percent of pharmacies in the country, including the largest chains, such as CVS, Rite Aid, and Walgreens. In 2009 and 2010, doctors will receive a 2-percent bonus on Medicare payments, 1-percent in 2011 and 2012, and half a percent in 2013. In addition to the incentives, Medicare plans to push doctors towards the electronic methods by instituting penalties on those still using paper prescriptions starting in 2012. Starting at 1-percent, the penalty will rise half a percent per year till it reaches 2-percent in 2014.

Overhead of switching to an electronic system is reasonably low thanks to The National ePrescribing Patient Safety Initiative, a coalition that offers Allscripts, an e-prescription software package for free to doctors.

It may not seem like much, but switching to e-prescriptions is a first step towards an overhaul of the health care industry championed by President-elect Obama, who has stressed the importance of modernizing the system with electronic records. [From: Reuters]

Computers

CDC Says Less Than 40% of Doctors Use Electronic Records



The National Center for Health Statistics, a part of the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), released a new study that reveals how far digital medical records have to go before replacing the mess of paper records doctors currently rely on.

According to a survey of 2,000 doctors nationwide, just under 40-percent of doctors use electronic records. Most use them in combination with old-school paper records, however. We assume that most rely primarily on paper records, since only 4-percent described their electronic systems as "fully functional."

Moving to electronic record would reduce the chance for errors and reduce costs for doctors, but there are many obstacles to overcome. Besides the costs of moving to a new system, developing a platform that would be usable by many different doctors and insurers would prove difficult, as would securing the records against hackers and criminals.

Developing such a system is a priority for the incoming Obama administration and is seen as an integral part of his plan for health-care reform. How he plans to pay for it remains to be seen. Maybe he can ask Santa for an electronic medical records system for Christmas. [From: Reuters]

Telemedicine's Rise Means More Doctors Are Phoning It In




The booming cost of health care in the United States and the successful deployment of international telecommunications infrastructure has created a booming market in Telemedicine, the practice of providing medical services from remote locations. US Hospitals are currently sending a large number of your x-rays, MRIs and CT scans to Bangalore, India to be processed and analyzed. Most of the outsourcing occurs during the middle of the night, during which there is the greatest shortage of available radiologists.

Banagalore is fast becoming the global center of Telemedicine, where a $1,500 US cost per scan is 35% cheaper than the US. The scans are performed by Western-educated Doctors who are able to leverage the extensive outsourcing infrastructure built up over the past 10 years of India's outsourcing boom.

A major obstacle to continued growth is a lack of supporting international regulatory framework for malpractice. Who will be liable if a mistake is made, if there is a mis-diagnosis? But the cost savings and the quick turnaround, 20-45 minutes, make the service indispensable. If you are concerned, ask your doctor if and when you get a scan. Your doctor should make all the information about the Teleradiologist available. [From Reuters]

Your Health Secrets Are Maybe-Already on the Internet



Now this is disturbing -- CNN Medical Correspondent Elizabeth Cohen was happily researching for a story on the above topic, and "stumbled upon" her own medical history online. Every un-fun detail from mammograms to removal of foot-splinters was chronicled on her insurance provider's Web site, and, in a similar fashion, the name of every prescription drug she's taken since 2003 was listed on her pharmaceutical plan's site. Awkward!

But Cohen's language is a little misleading because she didn't really stumble (as in -- she was happily Googling her name and suddenly details about her birth control preferences popped up). She actually called her insurance carrier and relayed personal info (date of birth, Social Security number, etc.) in order to access her online records on purpose.

The long and short of it is that many insurance companies do keep online records of clients' histories. This may not be a bad thing. An online archive could a great way to find all your health care information in one place. In fact, some people are into the idea and are paying between $15 and $150 to have their paper records scanned and put online through services like Google Health and Microsoft Healthvault. These records are kept in https secure sites, and are password protected. Though privacy concerns are inevitable, it's not like friends or family can just Google your name and find out about that time in college when you got ringworm from the shower curtain.

If you're worried about compromising details of your medical life being online, you can generally contact your insurance carrier and ask them to remove it, though Cohen suggests finding out what they have on you first. Check with your carrier to see what kind of info is actually online. Cohen's provider assured her that they keep the racier details (STDs, mental health issues, reproductive concerns) off the Internet. Interesting compromise?

As Harvardian surgery professor and medical informatics expert Dr. Steven Schwaitzberg says: "Welcome to the 21st century." [Source: CNN.com]

Switched Video

Follow Switched on Twitter

Deals of the Day

Latest Reviews from CNET.com

CNET provides the latest tech news, unbiased reviews, videos, podcasts, software, and downloads, making tech products easy to find, understand and use.

Top Product Reviews

  • Home Audio Reviews

    9.0 out of 10

    Definitive Technology BPX
    Works great with Dolby Pro Logic and Dolby Digital. Full Review

    9.0 out of 10

    Denon AVR-4306 (black)
    Incredibly well-featured 7.1-channel receiver; excellent sound quality; three HDMI inputs; converts analog video to HDMI output; upconverts analog video to 720p/1080i HD resolution; iPod and USB MP3 player connectivity; Internet radio and MP3/WMA streaming audio via built-in Ethernet port; XM Satellite Radio compatible; touch-screen remote; multizone, multisource operation; browser-based control via home network; accurate autocalibration routine. Full Review

    8.8 out of 10

    KEF KHT3005 (black)
    The KEF KHT-3005 is one compact, beautifully designed speaker package with solid aluminum satellites that feature unique driver technology to produce incredible clarity. Meanwhile, the equally astounding dual 10-inch, 250-watt powered subwoofer delivers ultradeep bass. Full Review

  • Cell Phone Reviews

    8.7 out of 10

    SignalBoost Mobile Professional Amplifier Kit
    The Mobile Professional Amplifier delivers a powerful signal boost to your cell phone. Also, it offers a compact design and easy setup. Full Review

    8.6 out of 10

    Wi-Ex zBoost YX510-PCS-CEL cell phone signal extender
    The Wi-Ex zBoost YX510-PCS-CEL significantly boosts your cell phone reception and is easy to operate. Also, it uses a wireless connection to your phone. Full Review

    8.3 out of 10

    LG VX6000 (Verizon Wireless)
    Compact and stylish; impressive battery life; solid audio quality; sharp color screen; built-in camera; USB ready; affordable. Full Review

  • Digital Camera Reviews

    9.3 out of 10

    Canon EOS 1D Mark III
    Extremely fast, 10-megapixel continuous shooting; very low noise; highly customizable; well-designed body with weather sealing; 3-inch LCD; abundant optional accessories. Full Review

    9.3 out of 10

    Nikon D3 (body only)
    Full-frame sensor; well designed, pro-level weather-sealed body; very low noise, even at extremely high ISOs; fast. Full Review

    9.0 out of 10

    Canon EOS-1Ds Mark III
    Very low noise, high quality images; 21.1 megapixels; live view shooting; pro-level build-quality and performance. Full Review

  • Desktop Reviews

    8.9 out of 10

    Velocity Micro Edge Z30 (Intel Core i7)
    Best value among midrange gaming PCs; Velocity Micro's consistently high build quality; compact case makes few sacrifices; second graphics card slot previously uncommon at this price. Full Review

    8.5 out of 10

    Apple iMac (24-inch, 2.8GHz)
    A minor specification update results in some significant performance gains; graphics upgrade an option on this 24-inch model; sleek, polished design didn't receive an update, but we won't start clamoring for a new design until the current one is at least 12 months old. Full Review

    8.4 out of 10

    Velocity Raptor Signature Edition Gaming PC
    One of the fastest PCs we've tested; a PCI Express RAID card helps media encoding performance; typically immaculate Velocity Micro assembly; strong, three-year warranty. Full Review

Featured Galleries

Nissan Land Glider
Vintage Keyboards
Retro Computer Logos
Vintage Computer Festival
Motorola CLIQ
iPod touch
iTunes 9
Video iPod Nano
The Beatles: Rock Band

 

Switched Desktop

Get the New Switched Desktop

Latest tech news, Switched mail, and more.

AOL Tech Network

Resources