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Mihir Patkar
THE CLINIC OF
When you walk into a dispensary in the near future, a doctor will be able to immediately get your medical records off your phone, diagnose your ailment instantly, and administer suitable drugs with a pain-free needle. What sounds like science fiction is fast being turned into reality by talented scientists across the world
reat technology is rarely something that revolutionizes our routines and habits. More often than not, great technology is something that seamlessly blends into our routines and habits to make them hassle-free. In the future, the procedure of a check-up at your local doctors clinic will be the same as what you go through today The three steps will remain the . same: Establishing the patients history , diagnosing the disease, and then treating the malady But the way these three . steps are carried out is what will mark the medical breakthroughs, making our routines easier and painless.
only does it perform them faster, but the results are also far more accurate. The doctor simply inserts the card into a little machine, adds a few drops of the sample taken from the patient via a tube in the cardholder, and out come the results. The device has been successfully tested to detect cervical cancer, and the researchers are now working on other diseases. Still, this method does require the painful procedure of drawing blood. But if a group of US-based scientists have their way your entire diagnoses , could be done simply by breathing into their gizmo. A team at Purdue University has developed a special material to rapidly diagnose patients by detecting chemical compounds called biomarkers in a persons respiration, in real time. We are talking about creating an inexpensive, rapid way of collecting diagnostic information about a patient, said researcher Carlos Martinez, adding
that this would just give an indicative result, which would require further tests to confirm or pinpoint the disease. The team was able to successfully detect diabetes in lab tests, but warned that such breathalyzers are a decade away in actual practice.
self, there are several studies being conducted to make pain-free needles, given the number of people across the world who are scared of it not to mention kids. The Ouchless Needle, developed by medical design company BellaNovus, is a disposable attachment for syringes, which delivers a short spray of vapo-coolant onto the skin before the needle goes in. The vapocoolant spray immediately refrigerates the skin, thereby reducing the feeling of needle penetration and making the injection more comfortable. But this still doesnt take away the trauma and initial fright of seeing a big, fat needle about to prick your skin.
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1. Med Records To Go
lets you access your online medical records securely on your cellphone 2. SINTEFs health chip can analyze a patients blood cells for eight diseases. The doctor simply adds a few drops of the sample taken from a person via a tube in the cardholder for instant results 3. BellaNovuss Ouchless Needle is a disposable attachment for syringes, which delivers a short spray of vapocoolant onto the skin before the needle goes in. The spray refrigerates the skin thereby reducing the needle prick 4. Microneedle technology that could replace injections is made up of tiny needles placed over a large surface. By just pressing the patch into your arm, the drug is administered pain-free 5. The Snip Doctor can analyse saliva samples to indicate how a patient is likely to respond to certain treatments
signs that could indicate a reaction to prescribed medications. It looks for specific DNA sequences that may be used by doctors to indicate how people are likely to respond to certain drugs, providing results in under 30 minutes. If the most appropriate drug dosages could be determined at the earliest stage, it could reduce the number of people admitted to hospital when medication goes wrong. Most importantly it could , also minimize the trauma that repeat hospitalisations have on people and their families, says chief scientist, professor Chris Toumazou. As for administering the injection it-
Thats where microneedle patches come in. An array of tiny needles, no longer than the width of a hair, are placed over a larger surface (usually the size of a small coin) to distribute the force of impact. By just pressing the patch into your arm, the drug is administered, and its practically pain-free. Its a bit like how a nicotine patch works, but not all drugs can be absorbed by the skin itself some need to be pumped in. For this purpose, Babak Ziaie, a researcher at Purdue university , and his team have developed a tiny pump thats activated by touch from the heat of your finger and requires no battery . It takes 20 to 30 seconds, Ziaie said. Its like a bandage you would use it and discard.