A T-shirt that monitors patients’ vital signs after urological cancer surgery could help patients leave hospital earlier and recover at home. The device, which was worn under clothing for three hours a day for about two weeks, made patients in a pilot study feel safer and more reassured than patients in a control group.
You May Also Like
- HIV: antiretroviral therapy (ART)
Single-tablet regimens support adherence
- Rare pulmonary syndromes
Yellow nail and Swyer-James syndrome
- Vaccinations against viral respiratory infections
Influenza, Covid-19 and RSV – Update 2025
- GLP1-RA therapy
Improvement in either weight or HbA1c – but never both
- Suicide
Dealing with trauma after suicide loss: What do bereaved people experience as effective?
- COPD exacerbations
Fast therapy initiation is not much better than expected
- Lung cancer with EGFR mutation
New perspectives in first-line therapy
- Collagenoses