The Future of Healthcare Technology

Updated on January 25, 2021

Healthcare is an industry that’s being reformed by tech. This is so that it’ll be able to meet all of the challenges brought by the 21st century. Tech can assist in growing healthcare facilities when it comes to meeting demands and operating efficiently in order to deliver the best patient care possible. Here’s a quick peek at a few of those growing trends.

Automated Blood Testing

As the population of our planet continues growing, we get things like automated blood testing. Automated blood testing makes getting blood work results much faster than traditional methods, and possible in clinics as well as retail settings.

Machine Learning and AI

Machine learning and AI offer better and novel ways to identify diseases, diagnose a variety of conditions, crowdsource, and then develop plans for treatment, and monitor any epidemics. There are even apps that will help with these types of things. All of this information will allow medical personnel to create more efficiency in terms of clinical trials and medical research so that the operations will be more efficient and better able to handle it when demands on the healthcare system increase. 

Robotics

We mentioned AI above, and many people might tend to combine that with robotics, but that isn’t always the case. Here’s something to consider – if it came down to life or death, would a robot be trusted with yours? Even now, doctors are utilizing robots such as one called the Da Vinci surgical robot to assist with a variety of tasks in operating rooms. However, the potential is endless. 

Digital Twins

Digital twins are sort of siblings with robotics and AI. Each is kind of in the same family, but with varying traits and distinctions. Digital twins are nearly real-time replicas of things in our physical world. When it comes to healthcare, that twin is an individual’s lifelong medical record. These twins can help doctors when it comes to determining how possible a successful outcome might be for different procedures, assist with therapy decisions, and even when it comes to managing chronic conditions and diseases. 

Computer and Machine Vision

When it comes to training computers so that they can see the world and then comprehend that visual input isn’t exactly an easy undertaking. There’s been significant progress when it comes to machine vision, and because of this, machine vision and computers are now being utilized in the medical field for things like surgery, viewing medical images and scans, and diagnostics. It’s even being utilized to determine the amount of blood women lose during childbirth so that doctors can give the appropriate care in the event of postpartum hemorrhaging.

Wearable Tech

How many people reading this do you think are wearing some sort of wearable tech? More than likely, it’s most of you. Wearable fitness tech can do so much more than simply telling you how many steps you’ve got in throughout the day. In fact, they can tell you how much and what type of sleep you’re getting, your heart rhythms, O2 sats, and much more. Some types of wearable tech will detect things like atrial fibrillation and then send reports on it directly to your doctor. There are biosensor patches that can track your heart rate, temperature, blood pressure, and much more.

Technologies such as the ones we’ve glossed over today grant incredible opportunities for better healthcare to be provided to people all over the planet. It can also assist our healthcare systems with demands that are ever-increasing. Also, since it’s constantly getting more advanced, it will help more and more in the future.

The Editorial Team at Healthcare Business Today is made up of skilled healthcare writers and experts, led by our managing editor, Daniel Casciato, who has over 25 years of experience in healthcare writing. Since 1998, we have produced compelling and informative content for numerous publications, establishing ourselves as a trusted resource for health and wellness information. We offer readers access to fresh health, medicine, science, and technology developments and the latest in patient news, emphasizing how these developments affect our lives.