According to a new technology report, Doctors and scientists have worked together to create an ingestible
computer. The pill-form
objects contain tiny sensors that help monitor the health of your body.
The pills can collect data on how your systems are running, and transmit
that information back to an external computer.
Several companies are currently working on pill prototypes. Just this
last year, Proteus Digital Health raised more than $60 million dollars
to create their version of a computer pill, which is actually powered by the body.
Rather than an internal battery system, the pill has copper and
magnesium ends which generates electricity to power itself via stomach
acids. The Proteus model requires that users wear a special patch that
transmits information from inside the body to a cell phone app that tracks everything from blood pressure to body temperature to movement and rest patterns.
The development could have huge implications for everything from the
monitoring of heart disease and diabetes, to the progress of
schizophrenia or Alzheimer’s. That’s great news for people who have
chronic diseases that need to be managed; doctors and family members
could potentially be connected to the system to help monitor the health
of a loved one. But it also could spell trouble when it comes to
privacy issues surrounding health information. After all, some of this
data could be used to justify dropping or denying physically compromised
patients from their insurance plans.
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