Covid-19 spurs collaboration in telehealth

MIT Technology Review 

The coronavirus pandemic has led to enhanced health-care collaboration, innovation, and increased use of digital technologies. Telehealth enables doctors to safely connect with patients virtually and monitor them remotely, whether in different cities or down the hall. And smarter and smaller medical devices are producing better outcomes for patients--a disruption is sensed, like low blood sugar or a too-rapidly beating heart, and a therapy is applied, in real time. This podcast episode was produced by Insights, the custom content arm of MIT Technology Review. It was not produced by MIT Technology Review's editorial staff. All of this is aided by improved processing capabilities and data--lots of data, and that means artificial intelligence. The guest in this episode of Business Lab is Laura Mauri, vice president of global clinical research and analytics at Medtronic. And she knows all about how data can help drive better patient outcomes, improve the patient experience, and provide valuable information for doctors and medical device creators. Dr. Mauri is an interventional cardiologist and one of the world's leading experts on clinical trials, but, as she says, the success of a clinical trial really does come down to the patient experience, and how it's improved. Mauri also has great hope for health care and technology. And although she cautions that this work is not simple, you can literally see progress happening--which is the outcome we all want. Business Lab is hosted by Laurel Ruma, director of Insights, the custom publishing division of MIT Technology Review.

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