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Our Definitions

Telecare Aware posts pointers to news items that have a broad range of interest. Authors of those items often use terms 'telecare' and telehealth' in inventive and ideosyncratic ways. Telecare Aware's editors can generally live with that variation. However, when we use these terms we usually mean:

Telecare: from simple personal alarms (AKA pendant/panic/medical/social alarms, PERS, and so on) through to smart homes that focus on alerts for risk including, for example: falls; smoke; changes in daily activity patterns and 'wandering'. Telecare may also be used to confirm that someone is safe and to prompt them to take medication. The alert generates an appropriate response to the situation allowing someone to live more independently, and confidently, in their own home for longer.

Telehealth: as in remote vital signs monitoring. This usually, but not exclusively, benefits patients with long term conditions.

Telecare Aware's editors concentrate on what we perceive to be significant events and technological and other developments in telecare and telehealth. We make no apology for being independent and opinionated or for trying to be interesting rather than comprehensive.

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Recommended

Editor Steve recently finished reading these two books and recommends them. The first, Klondike Playboy is an autobiography by John Boden, known in this industry as CEO of ElderIssues, Florida, and the second, Pitch Anything, by Oren Klaff is essential reading these days for anyone who has to sell new product ideas. Let's just say you won't want these techniques used against you!

And then, of course, there are the perpetual favourites that everyone in every equipment supplier company should read over and over again, by Geoffrey A Moore.

Also - Steve's add-ins for PowerPoint for Windows

And - Steve's App Store for Office (free download)

FDA approves mobile medical imager for brain hematomas

Friday, 13 January 2012 04:07

Far from the hullaballoo of CES, the US Navy Office of Naval Research, which also supports medical research, announced the FDA approval of the first handheld, battery-powered medical device, the Infrascanner, that can image an intracranial hematoma in that other 'golden hour' after an injury. For military medics it's simple; according to Dr. Michael Given, ONR's program manager for expeditionary medicine, combat casualty care, "You can do the whole scan in a minute or so." We tried to make it simple. Just a red-green lighted spot kind of display. So red, you're in trouble; green, everything's great. There are three sizes of red dots so you can tell if the bleeding is progressing. Simple and effective." Traumatic brain injury (TBI) casualties have been substantial in both Iraq and Afghanistan, and hematomas are notoriously difficult to detect in the field. Plans are to deploy the device first to Marine Corps Systems Command to test 'ruggedizing' features and evaluate field performance; if it survives the Marines, it will survive the Navy. Philadelphia-based InfraScan, the early stage company which developed the Infrascanner, received funding from both the ONR and private investors. Armed With Science article. ONR Release

 

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