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Intel's India unit develops remote health monitoring device

by Staff Writers
Bangalore, India (AFP) Jan 16, 2008
US microchip maker Intel is developing a technology to allow remote monitoring of a person's health through signals from a hand-held device, the company said on Wednesday.

Intel's Indian and US researchers have built a prototype which would alert a person carrying the wireless device, and doctors monitoring the person's health, to any impending medical emergency, said chief technology officer Justin Rattner.

"We're now seeing numerous new areas of application, such as education, health and entertainment, which can be used to transform people's lives," Rattner said.

"Technology like this will help us live better and longer," he told a news conference in the southern city of Bangalore.

The Santa Clara, California-based chipmaker's research facility in Bangalore is playing a leading role in development of the system.

Mobile health monitoring would cut costs and give access to preventive healthcare to under-served populations and rural communities, Rattner said.

Bangalore -- known as India's Silicon valley -- is one of Intel's 15 global research locations. The firm employs 3,000 people in the country, where it has invested more than one billion dollars.

The Bangalore facility is Intel's largest non-manufacturing site outside the United States.

Intel, the world's largest chipmaker, and other international companies have set up research facilities in India to take advantage of plentiful engineering and scientific talent to develop products and services.

Last year, the healthcare unit of General Electric unveiled a portable, battery-operated electrocardiograph that monitors heart functions and can be understood even by physicians who are not specialists in the field.

The product will enable physicians to treat patients, particularly in rural areas, where two-thirds of India's 1.1 billion population lives but lacks access to good medical facilities.

Related Links
Hospital and Medical News at InternDaily.com



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Freeze-dried tendon implants hold promise
Rochester, N.Y. (UPI) Jan 8, 2008
U.S. researchers said donated freeze-dried tendon grafts loaded with gene therapy may soon be used to repair injured tendons.







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