@WIRED 11 months ago
As medical institutions destigmatize transness, a proposed "emergency rule" in Missouri is a direct attack at the medical autonomy of #trans adults. https://wired.trib.al/nzLqa5h : Wiktor Szymanowicz/AP https://t.co/MYLNDGmIRo
@WIRED 11 months ago
Evgen Vorobiov bulk-buys crucial medical supplies on Amazon then uses his legal expertise to get them swiftly across the border from Poland into Ukraine—and then into the hands of soldiers on the frontline. : Mark Harris https://t.co/DCwDzOn7sO
@WIRED 11 months ago
“You have a right to your records.” This week’s @WIRED Classics revisits @mcgowankat’s 2016 feature about our medical records. Data generated by your body is routinely captured and sold by health care companies. Shouldn’t you benefit from it, too? https://www.wired.com/2016/02/our-medical-data-must-become-free/ https://t.co/gIFdad8m0H
@WIRED 1 year 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
Join us tomorrow at #WIREDHealth to explore and map the future of health. The event gathers medical practitioners, health technologists, pharmaceutical leaders and entrepreneurs for a day of eye-opening and inspirational stories. Get your tickets now: https://health.wired.com/ https://t.co/KOuQ4VFHtf
@WIRED 1 year ago
Trauma surgeon Annie Onishi watches scenes from #JohnWick, #StrangerThings, #Futurama, and more to break down how accurate their emergency room and medical scenes really are: https://t.co/VFQ3anNvcB
@WIRED 1 year ago
While battery tech is far from the "endless battery" of our dreams, it turns out one already exists. Your body generates enough energy to power wearables, medical sensors, and implanted devices—and tech designers are plugging in: https://www.wired.com/story/the-battery-that-never-gets-flat/?utm_source=twitter&utm_medium=social&utm_brand=wired&utm_social-type=owned : Jacqui Vanliew/Getty https://t.co/TAKT2XpdHu
@WIRED 1 year ago
The Evie aims to be the first consumer wearable that is also a medical-grade device that will help women track and manage their sleep quality & menstrual cycles through this phase of life. More of the best from CES 2023 right here: https://wired.trib.al/317wI3M : @rogerkisby https://t.co/bCTksXWW6K
@WIRED 1 year ago
The Evie aims to be the first consumer wearable that is also a medical-grade device that will help women track and manage their sleep quality & menstrual cycles through this phase of life. More of the best from CES 2023 right here: https://wired.trib.al/Lq6X6BJ : Rober Kisby https://t.co/wbyxkde0kP
@WIRED 1 year ago
Doctomatic is a remote patient-monitoring app which, using any medical device from heart-rate monitors to scales, allows doctors to check in on patients with chronic disease. :Gregori Civera https://wired.trib.al/80BpwK6 5/12 https://t.co/PLl8Etgl2V
@WIRED 1 year ago
The idea that aging might one day be treatable hasn’t yet won over regulators like the FDA, but it has been gaining ground in the field of medical research. 8/9 https://t.co/pkb5sTS9Np
@WIRED 2 years ago
A child-like robot, named Pedia_Roid, has been designed to mimic the critical medical symptoms of children to help train dental workers in Japan. : Reuters/ Fukuoka Dental College https://t.co/4UeLNf3jfH
@WIRED 2 years ago
#WIREDHQ Virtual is back! Join us on Jan. 5 at 11:30 am PT for an engaging conversation with Lisa Earnhardt from @AbbottNews on the next generation of medical devices. Learn more and sign up here: https://wired.trib.al/AcomDre #WIREDPartner #ad https://t.co/DyW44Mghcm
@WIRED 2 years ago
Trauma surgeon Annie Onishi watches scenes from #JohnWick, #StrangerThings, #Futurama, and more to break down how accurate their emergency room and medical scenes really are: https://wired.trib.al/XJSZEJz https://t.co/X8mbUDif8p
@WIRED 4 years ago
Protests can be long and police across the country have acted with unnecessary force against protestors. Here's a few gear reminders of what to bring with you to help keep you safe, things like a high-protein snacks, water, cash, and a medical information card. 3/ https://t.co/lL1pYXodFy
@WIRED 4 years ago
Is telemedicine the future? Dr. Caesar Djavaherian, Co-Founder and Medical Director of Carbon Health, talked with WIRED's @nxthompson about potential bottlenecks to making telemedicine widely available. Watch the entire interview: https://wired.trib.al/M9lLpCq https://t.co/UQFcTlUu0T
@WIRED 4 years ago
Join us for a Facebook Live today on the role of telemedicine during the coronavirus pandemic. In partnership with @Salesforce, WIRED's Nick Thompson and Dr. Caesar Djavaherian, Co-Founder and Medical Director of Carbon Health, will take your questions. https://wired.trib.al/9lFAiNn https://t.co/RkIwsdQuuW
@WIRED 4 years ago
Join us for a special FB Live on the role of telemedicine during the coronavirus pandemic this Friday, 7am PT/10am ET. In partnership with @Salesforce, WIRED's EIC Nick Thompson and Dr. Caesar Djavaherian, Co-Founder and Medical Director of Carbon Health will take your questions. https://t.co/5dGZPt3qdp
@WIRED 4 years ago
Craig Spencer, Director of Global Health in Emergency Medicine, New York-Presbyterian/Columbia University Medical Center: “You’re notified of another really sick patient coming in. You rush over. They’re also extremely sick, vomiting. They need to be put on life support ...” 8/ https://t.co/Ic9S5iLVDQ
@WIRED 4 years ago
Meredith Case, internal medicine resident, Columbia University Medical Center: “The deluge is here. Our ICU is completely full with intubated Covid patients. We are rapidly moving to expand capacity.” 6/ https://t.co/BT98Tt7Hzq
@WIRED 4 years ago
The problem starts with the world’s reliance on Chinese drug manufacturing. The country is the world’s largest producer of active pharmaceutical ingredients, and much of the US drug and medical supplies are made there 2/ https://wired.trib.al/XTkbh8h https://t.co/aVbHCtMmee
@WIRED 5 years ago
California tried to lift measles vaccination rates by blocking parents from opting out based on personal beliefs. Then medical exemptions started to rise. https://wired.trib.al/dsnAiyG https://t.co/FleqArK9oH
@WIRED 5 years ago
How realistic are these medical scenes from TV and Film? We asked a surgical resident https://t.co/HiomXifKnF
@WIRED 5 years ago
CEO of Google and #WIRED25 Icon Sundar Pichai believes in the artificial intelligence-powered ophthalmic future forseen by R. Kim, the Chief medical officer of Aravind Eye Hospital in India. https://wired.trib.al/3VGwO4N https://t.co/CIfwc22uVk
@WIRED 5 years ago
Sculptures or human organs? These human anatomical specimens have been used as teaching aids by the Medical Faculty of The University of Hong Kong since the 60's. But when shot close-up, in black and white, it can be hard to tell https://wired.trib.al/CYnpzxr : Chan Dick https://t.co/RaJjxvQ0Rn
@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 5 years ago
How realistic are these medical scenes from TV and Film? We asked a surgical resident https://t.co/QaIY6NPrYQ
@WIRED 5 years ago
How realistic are these medical scenes from TV and Film? This surgical resident breaks them down https://t.co/dllR79JzfW
@WIRED 6 years ago
These drones drop essential medical products in remote locations that may otherwise be cut off from supplies https://t.co/aUfYEd2VMj
@WIRED 6 years ago
These drones can drop essential medical products in remote locations that may otherwise be cut off from supplies. https://t.co/qyKpsaLyqA
@WIRED 6 years ago
These drones can drop essential medical products in remote locations that may otherwise be cut off from supplies. https://t.co/vJ1IPOwTpa
@WIRED 6 years ago
These drones can drop essential medical products in remote locations that may otherwise be cut off from supplies. https://t.co/XxpE3vtTkb
@WIRED 6 years ago
These drones can drop essential medical products in remote locations that may otherwise be cut off from supplies. https://t.co/TbMIfHluW7
@WIRED 6 years ago
These drones can drop essential medical products in remote locations that may otherwise be cut off from supplies. https://t.co/B3BDR1S2Us
@WIRED 6 years ago
A surgical resident breaks down medical scenes from Film & TV https://t.co/y09forpZEy
@WIRED 6 years ago
A surgical resident breaks down medical scenes from Film & TV https://t.co/qnabDLfIjP
@WIRED 6 years ago
A surgical resident breaks down medical scenes from Film & TV https://t.co/MAnIEMxLYd
@WIRED 6 years ago
A surgical resident breaks down medical scenes from Film & TV https://t.co/ekKjxbTD2V
@WIRED 6 years ago
A real surgeon breaks down medical scenes from Film & TV https://t.co/ur5bNJAgys
@WIRED 6 years ago
It's well-known in medical circles that flu vaccines aren’t very effective. But since these vaccines are making pharma companies $3 billion a year, medicine needs a Manhattan Project-style initiative to modernize immunizations. Read @marynmck's piece here: http://wrd.cm/2FDL6sG https://t.co/UWNeB3Ot9o
@WIRED 6 years ago
It’s well-known in medical circles that flu vaccines aren’t nearly as protective as most people assume. But since these current vaccines are still ...
@WIRED 6 years ago
This is a mouse tongue, and those blue dots are its taste buds. It's typically tough to watch taste buds in action—but a team at Harvard invented an ...