Tech in the NHS: This is what needs to change first
Forget AI and VR; if the NHS wants to use tech to improve healthcare, it needs to start with something else.
Forget AI and VR; if the NHS wants to use tech to improve healthcare, it needs to start with something else.
Researchers have been trying to find non-invasive ways to measure blood glucose and revamp approaches to managing diabetes for decades. Now, a new wave of companies are doing things differently.
From artificial intelligence to quantum computing, the NHS is getting ready to transform healthcare for the better.
MIT researchers have created swallowable chips that can help identify blood in the gastrointestinal tract.
Saul Kaplan and his team at the Business Innovation Factory are tackling their most important project ever: Transforming the maternal health experience for the most under-served population.
Healthcare has traditionally been cautious about new technologies. But a new wave of innovation is likely to change all of that.
This special report from ZDNet and TechRepublic looks at how technologies from AI and virtual reality to wearables and robots could help the NHS. Download it as a free PDF ebook.
Physician, reboot thyself! The health service is caught between its creaky past and a shiny future. But change is needed, and fast.
Innovators in the field of genomics are using the cloud, machine learning and other technologies to get a grip on the vast amounts of cancer-related data being produced -- with potentially life-saving results.
Nobody likes getting the jab. But technology might help with the holdouts.