Stanford Children's Health announced the winners of the pediatric medical device development competition hosted by the UCSF-Stanford Pediatric Device Consortium (PDC). […] In a timed, Shark Tank–style presentation, 13 finalists from a total of 74 applicants pitched their pediatric device ideas—in various stages of development—to a panel of judges.
About the future: A look at the Pediatric Innovation Showcase
Scientists, innovators, venture capitalists and medical industry experts gathered at Stanford last week for the second annual Stanford Children's Health Pediatric Innovation Showcase, a daylong event highlighting new devices and developments in pediatric medicine.
The Health Technology Podcast: Pioneering fetal surgery
When it comes to MR coils, the future is printed
Long exam times, patient discomfort and claustrophobia are major issues in the MR suite that result in delays, failed exams and ultimately affect the bottom line. Novel printed, flexible coils could be the solution that hospitals and other MR operators are searching for to achieve good exam outcomes, increase patient satisfaction, and reduce costs.
Pediatric Device Consortium Celebrates Future Innovations with $6.7M FDA Grant
UC Berkeley, UCSF team getting attention for device that helps diagnose pneumonia
Adam Rao, UCSF medical student and UC Berkeley-UCSF PhD candidate, is developing Tabla, an affordable device to detect pneunomia in children. Using the "percussion technique" and machine learning, the device detects sound frequencies in a patient's body to determine whether the lungs may have fluid accumulation.