@WIRED 10 months ago
We gazed into the crystal ball in the WIRED office to glimpse the future of medical technology. What we saw were 8 innovations that may soon be in a hospital ward near you. Including: 🤖 Fully Autonomous Surgical Robots Smart Toilets That Can Detect Disease https://t.co/5TDOFYAgsh
@WIRED 1 year ago
New anti-obesity medications appear to be the miracle cure for obsesity but, then again, so did Bariatric surgery at one point... https://wired.trib.al/2NhEEpx : WIRED Staff // Getty https://t.co/2JQtjJbvdE
@WIRED 5 years ago
Your Life Decoded, December 2007 “For a long time, WIRED didn’t cover much health care or medicine... The biggest shift was the arrival of true consumer genomics, and we were lucky enough to get an exclusive on 23andMe in 2007.” https://wired.trib.al/ot3amNA 4/ https://t.co/qoYbqBeWxv
@WIRED 5 years ago
AI can be a boon for the human race. But there’s also reason for caution. This is the WIRED Guide to artificial intelligence.
@WIRED 6 years ago
AI can be a boon for the human race. But there’s also reason for caution. This is the WIRED Guide to artificial intelligence.
@WIRED 6 years ago
AI can be a boon for the human race. But there’s also reason for caution. This is the WIRED Guide to artificial intelligence.
@WIRED 6 years ago
AI can be a boon for the human race. But there’s also reason for caution. This is the WIRED Guide to artificial intelligence.
@WIRED 8 years ago
When the doctors put a pacemaker into Marie Moe's heart to save her life, she had one question: can it be hacked? Now she's trying to hack it herself.Read ...
@WIRED 8 years ago
This is a story of how unexpected tech can save a life: When a woman walking her dog in California was struck by a car, doctors were desperate to find ...
@WIRED 9 years ago
"Facebook and Apple and all companies would do well by their employees to hold fertility vendors to the highest possible standards and not inadvertently put worker's physical and mental health in jeopardy."
@WIRED 9 years ago
The following piece contains spoilers for The Knick season finale, "Crutchfield." Stop here if you haven't seen it. You've been warned.
@WIRED 9 years ago
In the U.S., unnecessary medical treatments cost $210 billion a year. David Newman's site could help change that.
@WIRED 9 years ago
Let's face it, people aren't about to stop Googling for "vague tingling in my left arm" anytime soon. Google's experiment highlights just how hard it is to do real medicine on the Internet.
@WIRED 9 years ago
"The Knick" offers an unblinking look at what a crude practice medicine was more than 100 years ago -- and, just maybe, a sly examination of how healthcare became what it is now.