Wearable medical devices are hailed as the next wave of medical technology development and an important promoter of preventive medicine and health care. However, more and more doctors have begun to question these devices: In addition to being a market gimmick or a convenient Christmas gift, how much practicality does it exist? According to MD+DI Online, many physicians expressed their concerns not only about the availability of data collected by wearable devices such as FitBit, but also about privacy issues caused by the use of data. At the "Connected Health Symposium" held in Boston, USA, a doctor refuted the practicality of a wearable medical device, which is considered to be just a fashion electronic that solves the December Christmas gift problem. The product is gone. “Because when you want to give someone a Christmas gift in December, FitBit can be said to be an affordable option,†said Robert Pearl, CEO and Executive Director of The Permanente Medical Group. Many physicians have questioned the practicality of wearable fitness and medical devices. Pearl said that doctors are not particularly interested in continuously tracking patients' heart rhythm records and keeping them in medical records, so he cautioned designers and developers of the next generation of digital health devices and solutions to pay special attention to this. . "I don't think most people need to have thousands of records of continuous tracking of heart rhythms, and they don't need to add this information to the patient's medical records," Pearl said. Other doctors are also very negative about the information collected by these devices - there are not many types of data, but the amount of data is continuously accumulated. “In fact, the clinical challenge is 'How do I use this information effectively?'†said Ranndy Kellogg, managing director of Omron Healthcare, a wearable device developer, at an AdvaMed seminar in California in early October. "There may be too much information at the moment. But what is the right information for a particular patient or the needs of a particular consumer? Because I (in the consumer's position) have the ability to collect information. But it does not mean that you have to send it to the doctor!" In addition, if a doctor uses information from a third-party device, he or she may face a dispute of responsibility. Robert Schwartz, a cardiologist at the Minnesota Heart Institute in the United States, said doctors were even worried about the litigation problems caused by the use of these devices. “The issue of responsibility is crucial,†he asked. “If the patient sent me an AliveCor electrocardiogram (EKG), I didn’t do anything for it, but the patient had a problem and I had to take responsibility for it. ?" Schwartz said he also knows that some medical clinics directly reject patient readings from third-party devices, one of the reasons being the risk of being sued. Fruit juice drinks is a beverage made of fruit juice products obtained by physical methods such as pressing, centrifugation and extraction. Fruit juice retains most of the nutrients in the fruit, such as vitamins, minerals, sugar and pectin in dietary fiber. Often drinking fruit juice can help digestion, moisten the intestines and supplement the lack of nutrients in the diet. Juice Drinks,Honey Tea,Honey Citron Tea,Goji Berry Juice Xi'an Gawen Biotechnology Co., Ltd , https://www.agolyn-bio.com
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