No health hazard from mobile phone radiation: Experts
Radiations emitted by mobile phones and towers do not cause any health hazard, experts said on Thursday. Myths without any […]
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Radiations emitted by mobile phones and towers do not cause any health hazard, experts said on Thursday. Myths without any […]
By Shally Makin, Elets News Network (ENN) The go green format has penetrated greatly into healthcare with the introduction of […]
mHealth is a powerful tool for transferring critical information and monitoring essential functions Sanjay Aggarwal, CEO, UNICEL Technologies UNICEL is […]
Many more innovative things are yet to arrive in the mHealth space Kunal Sinha, CEO, HealthcareMagic We are an online-wellness […]
Software added to basic cell phones can help patients with diabetes significantly reduce a key measure of blood sugar over one year.
A new partnership of medical device makers with the cell-phone industry is being sought, to allow doctors to remotely monitor their patients’ heart rhythms, body temperature and breathing rates.
As part of a UN programme for tackling poverty in rural Africa, 79 villages across 10 African countries will be hooked up to cellular networks. Around half a million people, described by the UN as “the poorest of the poor”, are expected to make mobile calls soon.
This initiative will improve the health service delivery system in the rural areas. All the 55,400 women health volunteers in the State will receive mobile phones.
Now, patients can check medical records through their mobile phone. A division of Bio-Imaging Technologies, Inc., CapMed, has acquired the technology, which provides mobile phone-based medical records.
Now, patients can check medical records through their mobile phone. A division of Bio-Imaging Technologies, Inc., CapMed, has acquired the technology, which provides mobile phone-based medical records.
[This article was published in the July 2007 issue of the eHEALTH Magazine (https://www.ehealthonline.org)]
There is a need to provide connectivity and access to the much needed and poorly distributed health knowledge and expertise within the health system in Sub-Saharan Africa.
Around nine million people live in Rwanda and approximately, 200,000 of them are infected with HIV. So, the government of Rwanda is using mobile phones to track epidemics across the country.
[This article was published in the June 2007 issue of the eHEALTH Magazine (https://www.ehealthonline.org)]
The issue of rural e-Health software is a complex one. There are hundreds of open source Electronic Medical Record (EMR)systems supporting different platforms available around the world.