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
- How do weight loss interventions affect the muscles?
Reflective evaluation: do not neglect qualitative aspects
- From biomarkers to gene therapies
Getting to know ataxias
- Evidence-based therapy for psoriasis in difficult locations
IL-23 inhibition in scalp psoriasis: what’s new?
- Obesity in the family practice
Aim for realistic goals and avoid apportioning blame
- Evidence, pathophysiology and management in the light of current data
Heart failure with improved ejection fraction (HFimpEF)
- Early rheumatoid arthritis
C1M has potential as a biomarker
- Osteoporosis
Risk-stratified therapy with osteoanabolic agents improves outcomes
- "Swiss Health Care Atlas"