What are the latest medical breakthroughs?
What are the latest medical breakthroughs?
Five amazing health research breakthroughs
- The Oxford/AstraZeneca COVID-19 Vaccine.
- The human liver repaired using lab-grown cells.
- The super effective single-dose breast cancer treatment.
- The steroids and arthritis drugs saving the lives of COVID-19 patients.
- The oral antibiotic advancing cystic fibrosis treatment.
Is Google Health still active?
Despite outlining ambitious goals when it launched, Google has closed Google Health, its stand-alone health division, according to an internal memo obtained by Business Insider and confirmed by Google—but the company says it still plans to continue its numerous health initiatives.
What’s new in Medicine 2022?
Next-generation mRNA vaccines. A new approach for treating prostate cancer. Novel therapy for reducing LDL. These are three of the breakthrough technologies that will change healthcare in 2022, according to a panel of Cleveland Clinic physicians and researchers led by D.
How do I keep up with latest medical news?
Strategies to help you keep up with medical research
- Subscribe to Table of Contents (TOCs) alerts and monitor the latest medical research.
- Subscribe to medical news alerts, and research will be emailed to you.
- Set up keyword alerts to keep up with medical research topics.
- Set up author and journal alerts from Pubmed.
What is the biggest medical breakthrough?
In this blog, we take a look at what we think have been the five biggest medical breakthroughs in history.
- Germ Theory Inventor.
- First Organ Transplant.
- Antibiotic Invention History.
- First MRI Machine Invented.
- Artificial Intelligence in Medicine.
What is next medical technology?
With next-to-zero latency, 5G-connected sensors and medical devices can capture and transmit data nearly instantaneously. That will improve patient monitoring, which will in turn improve patient outcomes. Futurists are already considering the benefits of a marriage between 5G, healthcare, and robotics.
How often do anesthesiologists get sued?
About half (52 percent) of emergency physicians have been sued, compared with 38 percent of radiologists and 36 percent of anesthesiologists. (See table two in the report for a breakdown by specialty.