(Press-News.org) NJIT Distinguished Professor and electrical engineer Atam Dhawan hits the lecture trail again this summer as a distinguished speaker for an IEEE life sciences lecture series. His focus will be how "Point of Care Healthcare" can reduce illness, improve the quality of life, and stop spiraling healthcare costs. Dhawan, who will stop at conferences in Japan, Colombia and Croatia, tells audiences about the following.
If you aren't already using a "wearable" sensor—whether it's a watch that reads your blood pressure or a temperature strip for your child's forehead—you soon will be. Such devices offer a fast, inexpensive and efficient mobile health information communication system plus used the right way they can become application-based smart decision support systems for patients and healthcare providers. They provide quality healthcare at affordable costs in developing economies and for developed economies, they can avoid or reduce extended hospitalization and in-patient costs to reduce sky-rocketing healthcare costs. For managing quality healthcare in epidemics and disaster situations, they could be critical in providing vital medical attention to those first, who need the most, he said.
Such devices, which rely on hidden electronic sensors, will soon thanks to newer and better software applications, communicate important information about your health to your smart phones. Such devices in tandem with video-conferencing would be available in rural areas where less trained individuals can provide good quality healthcare; and more, may soon even be able to replace physician office visits.
"Why wait to be seen in a medical office and then followed up with additional costly visits for tests at different places, if technology can enable instant conversations, send immediate information and more," Dhawan said. The savings can go beyond improving healthcare, to encompassing lower transportation costs and improving the medical infrastructure.
Big data is coming next in tandem with preventive healthcare. A burgeoning industry is developing around recoding and using big data, such as electronic health records and patient-centric health information from genome to physiom levels. "There are enormous amounts of data from sub-cellular to behavior levels that would allow preventive and personalized medicine practice and early therapeutic intervention before serious problems start," said Dhawan. "Why put the financial burden into treatment when it is hard to fight against low survival rates and maintaining good quality of life in critical diseases such as heart attack, hypertension, strokes, cancers, diabetes and more. Just put the money into preventive care."
Thanks to technology, using stem cells and regenerative medicine may not be too distant. From tissue engineering to organ implants, the technological challenge is to have the body regenerate healthy cells and tissues and accept implants for proper functions without other side effects and damages, he said. This is not the same challenge as a skin graft for cosmetic surgery to treat cancer cells. Rather such applications require tremendously complex biological systems modeling and analysis, which means that technology, must be able to exist in a clinical environment. However, that capability is fast approaching.
Surgical robotics will continue to make their mark. "Precision in invasive neural or cancer-related procedures is critical to improving prognosis and quality of life after the procedure," Dhawan noted. "Surgical robots are capable of delivering this goal."
What isn't yet available are better rehabilitation technologies and prosthetics. "It will be here soon, but we need more work in this area," Dhawan said. Life expectancies are improving worldwide but not the quality of life. "Technology must improve so we can better deal with affordable global quality healthcare, and how technology can compensate for accidental or pathological bodily damages such as loss of limbs and mobility, stroke, neuro-degenerative disease and more," he said. "There is a need for effective rehabilitation protocols to restore physical and mental health ranging from mobility to behavior functions and this need is expected to increase exponentially worldwide as people mature towards higher elderly populations, which will be more stressed and more accident-prone."
Quality global healthcare at an affordable cost is the key to a healthy society, added Dhawan. But it will not be achieved in the traditional practice of medicine today. Technological innovations with information and communication systems will take the driver's seat for providing quality healthcare across the globe. For security and health reasons, you will be asked to share information and lose privacy. And you will undergo a transformational and new relationship with your medical doctors. They will ask you to monitor your health and to learn and respect your risk assessment. In short, you will be held more accountable for maintaining your health. In exchange, however, physicians will finally be able to give you an early diagnosis so that you and they can avoid costly and far less attractive outcomes.
INFORMATION:
NJIT, New Jersey's science and technology university, enrolls more than 9,943 students pursuing bachelor's, master's and doctoral degrees in 120 programs. The university consists of six colleges: Newark College of Engineering, College of Architecture and Design, College of Science and Liberal Arts, School of Management, College of Computing Sciences and Albert Dorman Honors College. U.S. News & World Report's 2012 Annual Guide to America's Best Colleges ranked NJIT in the top tier of national research universities. NJIT is internationally recognized for being at the edge in knowledge in architecture, applied mathematics, wireless communications and networking, solar physics, advanced engineered particulate materials, nanotechnology, neural engineering and e-learning. Many courses and certificate programs, as well as graduate degrees, are available online through the Division of Continuing Professional Education.
END
Research has shown that healthy behaviors are associated with a lower risk of Alzheimer's disease and dementia, but less is known about the potential link between positive lifestyle choices and milder memory complaints, especially those that occur earlier in life and could be the first indicators of later problems.
To examine the impact of these lifestyle choices on memory throughout adult life, UCLA researchers and the Gallup organization collaborated on a nationwide poll of more than 18,500 individuals between the ages of 18 and 99. Respondents were surveyed about ...
While there has been a steep decline in kids' consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages in California, African-American and Latino children may be replacing soda with 100 percent fruit juice while their white peers are not, according to a new study from UC San Francisco.
The study was the first to compare trends of sugar-sweetened beverages and 100 percent juice consumption in California.
"The decrease in the consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages among kids is a promising public health trend," said Amy Beck, MD, MPH, lead author and pediatrician at UCSF Benioff ...
GLYX-13, a molecular cousin to ketamine, induces similar antidepressant results without the street drug side effects, reported a study funded by the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) that was published last month in Neuropsychopharmacology.
Major depression affects about 10 percent of the adult population and is the second leading cause of disability in U.S. adults, according to the World Health Organization. Despite the availability of several different classes of antidepressant drugs such as selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), 30 to 40 percent ...
PHILADELPHIA — A newly developed, single-step Raman spectroscopy algorithm has the potential to simultaneously detect microcalcifications and enable diagnosis of the associated breast lesions with high precision, according to data published in Cancer Research, a journal of the American Association for Cancer Research.
"Nearly 1.6 million breast biopsies are performed and roughly 250,000 new breast cancers are diagnosed in the Unites States each year," said Ishan Barman, Ph.D., postdoctoral fellow at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge and the study's ...
INDIANAPOLIS -- An Indiana University study that compared the performance of elite track and field athletes younger than 20 and those 20 and older found that only a minority of the star junior athletes saw similar success as senior athletes.
The researchers think physical maturation is behind the disparity, with athletes who mature early reaping the benefits early, seeing their best times, jumps and throws at a younger age than Olympians, many of whom mature later.
"You see it in a lot of sports," said Robert Chapman, assistant professor in the IU School of Public ...
Keep your business in the black when negotiating a commercial lease
Article provided by Ethan A. Glaubiger
Visit us at http://www.glaubigerlaw.com
To paraphrase an old adage, there are three things that are most important in real estate: location, location, location. In this slowly recovering economy, the large number of vacancies in commercial buildings means that you may even have several desirable locations to choose from when selecting a site for your business.
But not so fast; simply having a location in mind does not mean you have to sacrifice favorable ...
Deaths due to distracted driving may be underreported
Article provided by Kamensky Cohen & Riechelson
Visit us at http://www.kcrlawfirm.com
In recent years, safety experts, lawmakers and even U.S. Department of Transportation head Ray LaHood have spoken out against the dangers of distracted driving. No matter the behavior - be it texting while driving or talking on a cell phone while behind the wheel - everyone agrees that driving while distracted is extremely dangerous. A new study indicates, however, that the practice may, in fact, be far deadlier than previously ...
Ohio woman sentenced to 8 years in prison for fatal DUI hit-and-run
Article provided by Horwitz & Horwitz, LLC
Visit us at http://www.horwitzlawsite.com
Most people know that Ohio law prohibits people from operating a vehicle while they are under the influence of alcohol. However, not everyone internalizes just how dangerous drunk driving can be, nor do they realize how serious the legal consequences can be if they cause a car accident that injures or kills another person.
A recent case in Logan County should serve as a cautionary tale to anyone who drinks ...
Bringing a foreign spouse or fiancee to the United States
Article provided by Vickerstaff Law Office, PSC
Visit us at http://www.vickerstafflaw.com
We are increasingly living in a global society. As part of this, it has become very common for American citizens to spend extended periods abroad for work, school or military service. Some of these people end up falling in love while they are away, and they want to bring their new spouse or fiancee back to the United States when they return home.
This can be done by obtaining the appropriate visa. However, because ...
U.S. to impose extra scrutiny on student visa holders
Article provided by Vickerstaff Law Office, PSC
Visit us at http://www.vickerstafflaw.com
In the wake of the Boston bombings, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security has ordered Customs and Border Protection Officers to impose extra scrutiny on individuals entering the United States on student visas.In the wake of the Boston bombings, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security has ordered Customs and Border Protection Officers to impose extra scrutiny on individuals entering the United States on student visas. ...