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As of 8/24/2020, the Prohealth Care one cost PHP990 (around 20USD), and the Care U Fingertips one cost PHP699 (around 14USD). With P42 shipping.
Timestamps:
00:00 Intro
00:19 What is an oximeter? What are its optimal readings?
Source- NPR article
www.npr.org/sections/goatsandsoda/2020/05/01/848400469/co...
01:03 Disclaimer
01:26 Unboxing the Prohealth Care Pulse Oximeter (PhP990)
03:09 In operation
04:27 Pulse reading comparison with my Huami Amazfit Verge Lite smartwatch
05:06 Unboxing the Care U Fingertips Pulse Oximeter
07:05 In operation
07:43 Hardware comparison of the two devices
09:06 Trying out both at the same time
The second device has a "PI%" that the first device doesn't have. I found the definition of "perfusion index" here: www.amperordirect.com/pc/help-pulse-oximeter/z-what-is-pi...
Perfusion Index or PI is the ratio of the pulsatile blood flow to the non-pulsatile static blood flow in a patient's peripheral tissue, such as finger tip, toe, or ear lobe. Perfusion index is an indication of the pulse strength at the sensor site. The PI's values range from 0.02% for very weak pulse to 20% for extremely strong pulse. The perfusion index varies depending on patients, physiological conditions, and monitoring sites. Because of this variability, each patient should establish his own "normal" perfusion index for a given location and use this for monitoring purposes.
10:51 The end
“ACRM and the Annual Conference provide the ideal venue for learning, contributing and networking, bringing together all the rehabilitation disciplines from around the world involved in rehabilitation research and clinician care. As a physician with interests spanning clinical care, research and promoting best practices in rehabilitation health care delivery, ACRM has been so valuable to me in developing and enriching my career, learning, teaching and connecting with colleagues. ACRM has provided me with some of my most valued lifelong professional associations and friendships.”
—Douglas Katz, MD, FACRM, FAAN, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston University Neurology Associates, HealthSouth Braintree Rehabilitation Hospital
REGISTER: ACRMconference.org
Crier Communications crierpr.com/public-relations/ is the top medical technology PR agency helps to build medical technology brands from infancy to mass market successes since our inception with our blend of Health PR, social media and branding.
Contact Information:
Business Address:
9507 Santa Monica Blvd.
Beverly Hills, CA 90210
Business Phone:
310 274 1072
Business Email:
info@crierpr.com
Website:
ACRM inaugural LaunchPad: A REHAB TECH INNOVATION COMPETITION acrm.org/launchpad Photo credit: Rakesh Pilkar
The "Veinviewer" by Luminetx.
With a digital near-infrared camera which never comes in contact with skin, phlebotomists jobs just got easier.
Architect: Gnaedinger Architekten
www.sciencecenter-medicaltechnology.com/
Viaje tras obtener el 1er premio del Concurso Fotográfico Bilbao Jet Lag 2009
Esther Dyson the 61 year old American former journalist and Wall Street technology analyst, now entrepreneur who concentrates her investments on emerging digital technologies, and is Chairwoman of EDventure Holdings focusing on issues related to medical technology, aviation, and space travel. Dyson has published an article on Project Syndicate titled ‘The rise of the attention economy’ claiming people in the attention economy spend their personal time attracting others' attention. Dyson states “…companies go online to earn money. Google is perhaps the purest example of a company that transforms purchase intentions into income; most other "internet" companies offer something of independent value on the other side of those searches. But many individuals, most of the time, go online without any interest in buying something. They are there to find out about the world, catch up with friends, play games, listen to music, chat, or just hang out - and, increasingly, to get the attention of other people. Thanks to highly productive surplus economies, they can spend a lot more time being economically inactive. …This attention economy is not the intention economy beloved of vendors, who grab consumers’ attention in order to sell them something. Rather, attention here has its own intrinsic, non-monetisable value. The attention economy is one in which people spend their personal time attracting others’ attention, whether by designing creative avatars, posting pithy comments, or accumulating "likes" for their cat photos. Just as we are driven to spread our physical DNA, so apparently do we have an urge to spread our virtual identities, so that we cannot be erased. Instead of physical descendants, we are offering our own virtual selves to posterity.” Inspired by Project Syndicate ow.ly/gwVob image source Twitter ow.ly/gwVdO
The locality this fossil was discovered in is famous for fossil fish - it is one of two snakes ever discovered there. This fossil was the better preserved of the two; the whereabouts of the other are unknown.
Today (9.10.10), technicians at The Methodist Hospital performed a 64-point CT scan of a fossil snake from the Museum’s collection. And not just any snake, but the best preserved Caenozoic snake known in a scientific collection in the USA. The scan was successful, and we’re still analyzing the data. We hope to have some additional information posted on the Museum’s blog soon. The fossil itself will go on display at the Museum in 2012.
Hussam Zaher, professor and curator of the collections of Herpetology and Paleontology at the Museu de Zoologia of the Universidade de São Paulo, talks about what information he's hoping to gain by scanning the fossil.
Today (9.10.10), technicians at The Methodist Hospital performed a 64-point CT scan of a fossil snake from the Museum’s collection. And not just any snake, but the best preserved Caenozoic snake known in a scientific collection in the USA. The scan was successful, and we’re still analyzing the data. We hope to have some additional information posted on the Museum’s blog soon. The fossil itself will go on display at the Museum in 2012.
Bildgebende Verfahren sind aus der Medizin nicht mehr wegzudenken. Für ihre laienverständliche Darstellung des Themas in den Medien erhielten Bettina Müller und Kirsten Milhan auf der MEDICA den Journalistenpreis.
Bildgebende Verfahren sind aus der Medizin nicht mehr wegzudenken. Für ihre laienverständliche Darstellung des Themas in den Medien erhielten Bettina Müller und Kirsten Milhan auf der MEDICA den Journalistenpreis.
Bildgebende Verfahren sind aus der Medizin nicht mehr wegzudenken. Für ihre laienverständliche Darstellung des Themas in den Medien erhielten Bettina Müller und Kirsten Milhan auf der MEDICA den Journalistenpreis.
If we can extract anything positive from the COVID-19 outbreak, it may be to learn how we can better deploy technology solutions to health concerns.. Read full Blog: www.theworldguideline.com/technologies-during-the-covid-1...
Bildgebende Verfahren sind aus der Medizin nicht mehr wegzudenken. Für ihre laienverständliche Darstellung des Themas in den Medien erhielten Bettina Müller und Kirsten Milhan auf der MEDICA den Journalistenpreis.
***EXCLUSIVE***
FORT WORTH, TX - UNDATED: Dallas Wiens with his daughter Scarlette at his grandparent's home in Fort Worth, Texas.
Dallas Wiens, a building worker badly disfigured in an accident, has received the United States' first full face transplant. More than 30 doctors, nurses and other staff at Boston's Brigham and Women's Hospital performed the 15-hour operation last week on the 25-year-old. Dallas, of Fort Worth, Texas, was left blind and without lips, a nose or eyebrows after an electrical accident in November 2008. Doctors transplanted an entire new face, including a nose, lips, skin and muscles and nerves that animate the skin and give sensation. The donor's identity was not disclosed. The world's first full face transplant was performed by doctors in Spain last March for a farmer who was unable to breathe or eat on his own after accidentally shooting himself in the face.
PHOTOGRAPHY BY PAUL MOSELEY / BARCROFT USA
UK Office, London.
T +44 845 370 2233
USA Office, New York City.
T +1 212 564 8159
Indian Office, Delhi.
T +91 114 653 2118
Australasian & Pacific Rim Office, Melbourne.
E info@barcroftpacific.com
T +613 9510 3188 or +613 9510 0688
Tagesleitung:
Prof. Dr. med. Dipl.-Kfm. (FH) Rainer Riedel, Leiter des Instituts für Medizin-Ökonomie und medizinische Versorgungsforschung und Präsident der Rheinischen Fachhochschule Köln
Eröffnungsrede:
Dr. Walter Döllinger, Staatssekretär im Ministerium für Arbeit, Gesundheit und Soziales des Landes NRW
Moderation der Podiumsdiskussion:
Jürgen Zurheide, Redakteur, Düsseldorf
Bildgebende Verfahren sind aus der Medizin nicht mehr wegzudenken. Für ihre laienverständliche Darstellung des Themas in den Medien erhielten Bettina Müller und Kirsten Milhan auf der MEDICA den Journalistenpreis.
16 APRIL 2020 // 1:00 – 2:00 PM ET
Use of Televideo in Rehabilitation Medicine: Guidelines for Safe Delivery of Therapy and Case Consultation
GUEST: Mark Pedrotty, PhD, Senior Clinical Psychologist and Professor in Pediatrics, Division of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation at the University of New Mexico Health Science Center
MODERATOR
Tracey Wallace, MS, CCC-SLP
Project & Education Coordinator
Shepherd Center
INVESTIGATION of LOCAL MEDICINAL HERBAL REMEDIES
transcript with the slide presentation originally given by Phillip Hughes on 10 May 1976 at Cabell-Huntington Hospital School of Medical Technology (Marshall University Medical School, Huntington, WV) accompanying the scientific paper detailing original research concerning herbal remedy known as Catfish's 'Bitters' produced by Catfish Man-of-the-Woods near Glenwood, West Virginia
[ 1 of 10 ~ continuing on subsequent images ]
"Mystery Solved! It's an amphibian!" Dr. Bob Bakker, the Museum's visiting curator of paleontology, could immediately tell that the North Texas fossil was an amphibian. The exact species will take more time to identify.
Today (9.10.10), technicians at The Methodist Hospital performed a 64-point CT scan of a fossil snake from the Museum’s collection. And not just any snake, but the best preserved Caenozoic snake known in a scientific collection in the USA. The scan was successful, and we’re still analyzing the data. We hope to have some additional information posted on the Museum’s blog soon. The fossil itself will go on display at the Museum in 2012.
THU 7 MAY // 1:00 – 2:00 PM ET
Limb Loss Rehabilitation During the Pandemic: A Stakeholder Perspective on Barriers & Telemedicine
GUEST: Prateek Grover, MD, PhD, MHA, FAAPMR, PM&R physician, Washington University School of Medicine and Medical Director for the Rehabilitation Institute of St Louis, MO.
MODERATOR: John Morris, PhD, FACRM, Senior Clinical Research Scientist, Crawford Research Institute, Shepherd Center
Hansjoachim Müller, 43, kommt aus Heide und hat seine Tochter Lena, 13, im Schlepptau. Sie möchte auf der MEDICA einen Einblick in die Orthopädie bekommen. "Ich persönlich lege meinen Schwerpunkt allerdings auf die Hallen 9 bis 11. Die Messtechnik interessiert mich sehr", sagt Herr Müller bevor er mit seiner Tochter weiter zieht.
We had a little bit of extra time with the CT scanner, so a few other fossils got the 3D treatment.
Today (9.10.10), technicians at The Methodist Hospital performed a 64-point CT scan of a fossil snake from the Museum’s collection. And not just any snake, but the best preserved Caenozoic snake known in a scientific collection in the USA. The scan was successful, and we’re still analyzing the data. We hope to have some additional information posted on the Museum’s blog soon. The fossil itself will go on display at the Museum in 2012.
From the way this fossil has been prepared, only one side is accessible for view. The CT scan will give paleontologists a peek at what's still inside the stone, as well as interior spaces like the inside of the skull.
HMNS Associate Curator of Paleontology David Temple and Hussam Zaher, professor and curator of the collections of Herpetology and Paleontology at the Museu de Zoologia of the Universidade de São Paulo, lift the fossil and carry it to the scanner.
Today (9.10.10), technicians at The Methodist Hospital performed a 64-point CT scan of a fossil snake from the Museum’s collection. And not just any snake, but the best preserved Caenozoic snake known in a scientific collection in the USA. The scan was successful, and we’re still analyzing the data. We hope to have some additional information posted on the Museum’s blog soon. The fossil itself will go on display at the Museum in 2012.
Ernst Pohl, Omniskop, X-ray technology, Fleckenstraße, Kiel, 1920s.
"Meine Lehrzeit Werkstatt Fleckenstraße" Firma Ernst Pohl, Kiel.
"Omniskop".
Lehrzeit, Firma Ernst Pohl, Omniskop, Fleckenstraße, Kiel, 1920er
My apprenticeship, Ernst Pohl company, Fleckenstraße, Kiel, 1920s.
Ernst Pohl, Omniskop, X-ray technology, Fleckenstraße, Kiel, 1920s.
"Meine Lehrzeit Werkstatt Fleckenstraße" Firma Ernst Pohl, Kiel.
EXCYSTATION of Giardia lamblia
presented by Elouise Hughes at Biology Department, Kennesaw State College, Marietta, GA, 1990
[1 of 2 ~ see also video-micrograph ]
Ernst Pohl, Omniskop, X-ray technology, Fleckenstraße, Kiel, 1920s.
"Meine Lehrzeit Werkstatt Fleckenstraße" Firma Ernst Pohl, Kiel.
"Herr Thiele [in der] Dreherei"
HMNS Associate Curator of Paleontology David Temple and Hussam Zaher, professor and curator of the collections of Herpetology and Paleontology at the Museu de Zoologia of the Universidade de São Paulo, carry the snake fossil to the CT scanner.
Today (9.10.10), technicians at The Methodist Hospital performed a 64-point CT scan of a fossil snake from the Museum’s collection. And not just any snake, but the best preserved Caenozoic snake known in a scientific collection in the USA. The scan was successful, and we’re still analyzing the data. We hope to have some additional information posted on the Museum’s blog soon. The fossil itself will go on display at the Museum in 2012.
Once the scan is completed - it took less than a minute to capture 3000 images - the data is stitched together to form a 3-dimensional composite that can be rotated in 360 degrees and altered to showcase different kinds of data and viewpoints.
Today (9.10.10), technicians at The Methodist Hospital performed a 64-point CT scan of a fossil snake from the Museum’s collection. And not just any snake, but the best preserved Caenozoic snake known in a scientific collection in the USA. The scan was successful, and we’re still analyzing the data. We hope to have some additional information posted on the Museum’s blog soon. The fossil itself will go on display at the Museum in 2012.
Architect: Gnaedinger Architekten
www.sciencecenter-medicaltechnology.com/
Viaje tras obtener el 1er premio del Concurso Fotográfico Bilbao Jet Lag 2009
HMNS Associate Curator of Paleontology David Temple and Hussam Zaher, professor and curator of the collections of Herpetology and Paleontology at the Museu de Zoologia of the Universidade de São Paulo, uncrate the snake fossil to get it ready to be scanned.
Today (9.10.10), technicians at The Methodist Hospital performed a 64-point CT scan of a fossil snake from the Museum’s collection. And not just any snake, but the best preserved Caenozoic snake known in a scientific collection in the USA. The scan was successful, and we’re still analyzing the data. We hope to have some additional information posted on the Museum’s blog soon. The fossil itself will go on display at the Museum in 2012.
This is a screen grab of Tyde Pavlinik's blog post on new robotics technology being developed at Johns Hopkins.
Tagesleitung:
Prof. Dr. med. Dipl.-Kfm. (FH) Rainer Riedel, Leiter des Instituts für Medizin-Ökonomie und medizinische Versorgungsforschung und Präsident der Rheinischen Fachhochschule Köln
Eröffnungsrede:
Dr. Walter Döllinger, Staatssekretär im Ministerium für Arbeit, Gesundheit und Soziales des Landes NRW
Moderation der Podiumsdiskussion:
Jürgen Zurheide, Redakteur, Düsseldorf
From an initial look at the snake fossil CT scan, Zaher was able to tell that it does not appear to have vestigial limbs - confirming that it is more highly evolved than previously thought.
Today (9.10.10), technicians at The Methodist Hospital performed a 64-point CT scan of a fossil snake from the Museum’s collection. And not just any snake, but the best preserved Caenozoic snake known in a scientific collection in the USA. The scan was successful, and we’re still analyzing the data. We hope to have some additional information posted on the Museum’s blog soon. The fossil itself will go on display at the Museum in 2012.
Tagesleitung:
Prof. Dr. med. Dipl.-Kfm. (FH) Rainer Riedel, Leiter des Instituts für Medizin-Ökonomie und medizinische Versorgungsforschung und Präsident der Rheinischen Fachhochschule Köln
Eröffnungsrede:
Dr. Walter Döllinger, Staatssekretär im Ministerium für Arbeit, Gesundheit und Soziales des Landes NRW
Moderation der Podiumsdiskussion:
Jürgen Zurheide, Redakteur, Düsseldorf
Today (9.10.10), technicians at The Methodist Hospital performed a 64-point CT scan of a fossil snake from the Museum’s collection. And not just any snake, but the best preserved Caenozoic snake known in a scientific collection in the USA. The scan was successful, and we’re still analyzing the data. We hope to have some additional information posted on the Museum’s blog soon. The fossil itself will go on display at the Museum in 2012.
Das Paar Nadine Lendzian und Marco Michalak ist mit einem ganz konkreten Ziel auf der Messe. "Ich habe erfahren, dass man an einigen Ständen eine Ultraschalluntersuchung machen lassen kann. Deswegen bin ich hier", erzählt uns die werdende Mutter. Aus den Erzählungen einer Freundin weiß sie, dass man sich an den Ausstellerständen mehr Zeit nimmt, als es beim Arzt oft der Fall ist. Beide hoffen, mit ein paar schönen Aufnahmen ihres Kindes nach Hause gehen zu können.
In it goes!
Today (9.10.10), technicians at The Methodist Hospital performed a 64-point CT scan of a fossil snake from the Museum’s collection. And not just any snake, but the best preserved Caenozoic snake known in a scientific collection in the USA. The scan was successful, and we’re still analyzing the data. We hope to have some additional information posted on the Museum’s blog soon. The fossil itself will go on display at the Museum in 2012.