From AI doctors to 3D X-rays, the future of healthcare is already here
A health check of the world today may seem gloomy – antibiotics are failing, people are dying of easily treatable diseases because they're poor, and conditions such as dementia are on the rise. The scientists, researchers, investors and startups at the Francis Crick Institute in London were only too aware of the challenges – here's what we learned. Women account for almost 50 per cent of the world's population, but women's health technology hasn't updated for years – however, Tania Boler, CEO of London- and Berlin-based start-up Elvie, argued that's about to change. "We are witnessing three big trends," she told the room. "The big feminist surge, the tech revolution in connected devices and the paradigm shift towards individuals taking charge of their own health."
May-22-2018, 09:30:44 GMT
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- North America > United States (0.30)
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- Health & Medicine > Therapeutic Area
- Oncology (1.00)
- Infections and Infectious Diseases (1.00)
- Neurology > Dementia (0.71)
- Health & Medicine > Therapeutic Area
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