@WIRED 5 years ago
Zipline uses autonomous planes to deliver medical supplies—vaccines, pharmaceuticals, and blood—to hard-to-reach places. Will its cofounder and CEO Keller Rinaudo change the world? #WIRED25 Icon Anne Wojcicki thinks so. https://wired.trib.al/xNW2FWb https://t.co/2oW2FUU9zC
@WIRED 5 years ago
Who will change the world? #WIRED25 Icon @BillGates nominates professor Steven Quake | "Few things trouble me as much as the fact that many cutting-edge medical advances aren't available to everyone who needs them... Stephen Quake wants to change that." https://wired.trib.al/INQ6XHB https://t.co/ouQJmdU6xC
@WIRED 5 years ago
Meet Hal, a medical training robot that can talk, cry, bleed, urinate, and even change facial expressions. Say goodbye to the old-school rubber dummies, the future of medical simulators is here—and it's a little creepy https://wired.trib.al/qP9FKET https://t.co/efEC1eUdPX
@WIRED 6 years ago
The technology, which makes your smartphone screen a window into the human body, is not on the market yet, but it’s already saved a life.
@WIRED 6 years ago
The technology, which makes your smartphone screen a window into the human body, is not on the market yet, but it’s already saved a life.
@WIRED 6 years ago
For 150 years, neither doctor nor patient have found the speculum to be an optimal medical device. Now, it's finally getting a redesign.
@WIRED 6 years ago
For 150 years, neither doctor nor patient have found the speculum to be an optimal medical device. Now, it's finally getting a redesign.
@WIRED 6 years ago
Researchers are optimistic that this feat of tissue engineering will bring about a sea change in basic brain research, disease modeling and personalized ...
@WIRED 6 years ago
This startup is on a mission to build the world’s most comprehensive library of medical case studies—and it could change the game.
@WIRED 6 years ago
Meet the online pharmacy trying to solve the problem of drug adherence by simplifying your medicine cabinet.
@WIRED 9 years ago
In the U.S., unnecessary medical treatments cost $210 billion a year. David Newman's site could help change that.