Medical Tricorder From Wikipedia,
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Smartphones may be used as medical tricorders; smartphone software and camera detect pulse from a fingertip using a technique similar to that of a pulse oximeters. |
A hockey puck-shaped object that can apparently measure your temperature, heart rate, oximetry (blood oxygenation), run an electrocardiogram, gauge heart rate variability, clock pulse wave transit time (related to blood pressure), perform a urine analysis and calculate a metric Scanadu refers to (vaguely) as "stress." All you have to do to get these readings, urine analysis notwithstanding, is hold the Scout against your forehead for a few seconds.
—Matt Peckham in Time Tech, May 2013
The TV show Star Trek had a fictional Dr. McCoy who used a device called a tricorder to examine patients in an instant. The fictional device has spawned a search for its real-life equivalent. |
The medical tricorder has a detachable, high-resolution, hand-held scanner that sends life-sign information to the tricorder itself. It can check all vital organ functions, detect the presence of dangerous organisms, and human physiology. Its data banks also contain information on non-human races known to the Federation, thereby making it possible to treat other life-forms.
—report in the BBC
Several reports suggest that there may be opposition to the development of such a device by national medical regulating authorities such as the Food and Drug Administration in the United States, as well as possible opposition by doctors unwilling to permit consumers to do extensive self-diagnosis. There is agreement that such a device could bring huge increases in productivity and cost-savings, and spur a billion dollar market. There are signs that over a hundred venture-capital firms have invested $1.1 billion in digital health technology in 2012. A prediction in 2014 was that medical tricorders would be scientifically viable in 2019, mainstream in 2022, and financially viable in 2025.
X Prize Competition
An inducement prize from Qualcomm of US$10 million, the Qualcomm Tricorder X Prize that was announced in 2012, has spurred the scientific and medical communities in a global competition. featuring 230 teams from 30 countries to create such a device. The X Prize Foundation launched the Tricorder X PRIZE at the 2012 Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas and promised to award $10 million to the first team to build a medical tricorder. According to the prize guidelines, the device should diagnose 15 different medical conditions, including a sore throat to sleep apnea to colon cancer. The prize will be awarded partially on the basis of which invention has the most consumer friendly interface. To win the prize, a successful medical tricorder will have to diagnose these conditions across "30 people in 3 days".
Functions of a Medical Tricorder
There is agreement that a device should be able to do the following:
- Disease diagnosis.
- Show ongoing personal health metrics such as heart rate.
- Monitor ongoing health.
- Summarize a person's state of health.
- Confirm quickly if a person is healthy or not. This function would be similar to the check engine light on a car.
How it Might Work
The conception of a medical tricorder will be a general purpose scanner with many functions, including that of measuring temperatures like these digital thermometers. |
Similar Devices
A handheld single-function electronic device to measure glucose levels of diabetics. Performing this and other tests would be one of the many functions of a medical tricorder. |
Tricorders in the Marketplace
There are reports of products in development and in the marketplace:
- Scanadu. A device made by the firm Scanadu is a small hand-held sensor which is put next to a patient's forehead which detects vital signs such as heart rate, breathing rate, blood oxygenation, pulse transmit time and temperature, and has electrodes to measure heart signals, and works in conjunction with a mobile app. There was a report that it was being used by aquatic oceanographer and filmmaker Fabien Cousteau to monitor the health of underwater divers. The firm reportedly raised $1,664,574 from 8,500 backers through crowd funding.
- The Scanadu Scout Medical Tricorder is a device straight out of the Star Trek. This device is packed with sensors... bring the Tricorder in direct contact with your left temple for 10 seconds and it will analyse your vitals, including the temperature, heart rate, oximetry, ECG, respiratory rate, blood pressure, urine analysis and emotional stress level. The results of this analysis will be recorded and shown to you via a smartphone app. —February 2014 in The New Indian Express
- QuantuMDx Group. This British biotech firm is developing a device described as a "handheld DNA lab" to analyze malaria; the firm is raising capital by means of crowd funding. It developed a virus detection device called Q-POC which breaks open cells to analyze their DNA.
- Ibis Biosciences. This firm has developed an analysis machine that can "identify about 1,000 of the most common disease-causing bacteria, viruses and fungi within a few hours of taking a patient’s blood sample" by comparing the genetic fingerprints of pathogens against a reference database.
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Medical Tricorder From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tricorder X Prize From Wikipedia,
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Qualcomm Tricorder X PRIZE:
- Awarded for developing a device that can - "diagnose patients better than or equal to a panel of board certified physicians"
- Country - Worldwide
- Presented by - X PRIZE Foundation (sponsored by Qualcomm)
- Reward Grand Prize - US$7 million
- Second Prize - US$2 million
- Third Prize - US$1 million
- First awarded - 2014
- Official website - http://www.qualcommtricorderxprize.org/
The Qualcomm Tricorder X PRIZE is an inducement prize contest, offering a US$7 million Grand Prize, US$2 million Second Prize, and US$1 million Third Prize to the best among the finalists offering an automatic non-invasive health diagnostics packaged into a single portable device that weighs no more than 5 pounds (2.3 kg), able to diagnose over a dozen medical conditions, including whooping cough, hypertension, mononucleosis, shingles, stroke, melanoma, HIV, and osteoporosis. The name is taken from the tricorder device from the science fiction TV series Star Trek which can be used to instantly diagnose ailments. The prize was announced by the X Prize Foundation on 10 May 2011 and subsequently launched on 10 January 2012 at CES 2012. Devices will be sent to the USA to be independently tested on patients during the winter and spring of 2015.
Finalists
The finalists include:
- Aezon (USA) - Student engineers team from Johns Hopkins University partnering with the Center for Bioengineering Innovation & Design.
- CloudDX (Canada) - Team from medical devices company Biosign and led by company chief medical officer Sonny Kohli.
- Danvantri (India) - Team from technology company American Megatrends India and led by Sridharan Mani.
- DMI (USA) - Team led by Eugene Y. Chan of the DNA Medicine Institute partnering with NASA, the National Institutes of Health and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.
- Dynamical Biomarkers Group (Taiwan) - Team led by Chung-Kang Peng of the Harvard Medical School.
- Final Frontier Medical Devices (USA) - Team led by brothers Basil and George Harris, founders of Basil Leaf Technologies.
- MESI (Slovenia) - Team from medical device company MESI, partnering with Jozef Stefan Institute, D.Labs, and Gigodesign, led by Jakob Susteric.
- SCANADU (USA) - Team from SCANADU, led by Walter De Brouwer.
- SCANurse (UK) - Team from medical company SCANurse, led by Anil Vaidya.
- Zensor (Ireland) - Team from medical company Intelesens, led by Jim McLaughlin.
See also:
Medical Tricorder
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Tricorder X Prize From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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