Tech Innovations that Will Revolutionize the Healthcare Industry In 2024

Have you heard about the ultrasonic pocket devices that connect to your phone and that are 50 times less expensive than hospital machines? Or did you notice that virtual reality expedites cures in rehab centers? Or that artificial intelligence can identify lung malignancies more accurately than medical professionals? These are just a few advancements that are remarkably quickly changing medicine today.

Though no one can foresee the future, the innovations and ideas that follow at least offer a peek at it. They are at the forefront of healthcare, like the individuals behind them. Check out the list that will reshape the medical and public health that is anticipated to occur in the 2020s, especially in 2024 onwards.

Medical supplies delivered by drones

UPS has been flying an autonomous drone to transfer vital medical samples, such as blood or tissue, between two branches of a hospital 150 yards apart in Raleigh, North Carolina, since March as part of a trial program dubbed Flight Forward. Although the drones couldn’t cover the same distance as quickly as a fleet-footed runner, the initiative proved successful as a proof-of-concept, and in October the FAA approved the company’s expansion to 20 hospitals nationwide over the 2 years. In case of critical truck accidents and road accidents, sending medicines to victims will no longer be a time-consuming issue. 

Diabetes treatment using stem cells

Of the 1.25 million Americans who suffer from type 1 diabetes, Doug Melton, a scientist at Harvard University, was particularly interested in his two children, Emma and Sam. Insulin injections, numerous daily blood-glucose tests, and a lifetime of cautious eating are possible treatment options. Melton takes an alternative tack, generating insulin-producing replacement beta cells using stem cells. 

The business has developed a tiny implantable device that can house millions of replacement beta cells, allowing immune cells to stay outside while still allowing glucose and insulin to pass through. 

Big data

Tens of millions of the world’s 7.5 billion people use wearables like smartwatches in addition to more conventional tools like blood pressure monitors to check their health. A valuable tool for medication development, lifestyle study, and other purposes would be available to medical researchers if it were possible to compile all that data from even a few million of us and make it anonymous yet searchable.

A wearable band that can read your mind

A little digital dinosaur is shown hopping over barriers on a computer screen in front of a man wearing what appears to be a massive black wristwatch. Despite his hands being immobile, the man is using his brain to control the dinosaur. The CTRL-kit, the gadget he wears on his wrist, is designed to detect electrical impulses that, practically immediately after a person thinks about doing a specific movement, flow from the motor neurons down the arm muscles and to the hand. This gadget could give you access to new types of cures for amputation, stroke, or even Parkinson’s disease.

Intelligent medical technology is revolutionizing the field in several ways. Physicians may leverage artificial intelligence (AI),  data, and other cutting-edge new tools to make more proactive, data-driven healthcare decisions now that more patients have access to monitoring treatment alternatives. 


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