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TECHNOLOGY IN CARE


AI supercomputers will analyse your bio-samples (like saliva and blood) and be able to diagnose your condition within minutes instead of weeks and with a 90% accuracy rate.


PRE-EMPT ILLNESS AND TREAT IN MEDICAL


EMERGENCIES By 2035, implants injected under the skin will analyse your blood for toxins, viruses, and bacteria. Data collected by these implants will be shared with your personal health app, online health monitoring subscription service, or local healthcare network, to warn you of an impending illness before you even feel any symptoms.


Only five years aſter this, in 2040, drones will be sent out ahead of ambulances to provide early care while paramedics are en- route. By the early 2040s, most ambulances will be quadcopters that can land anywhere and be flown by GPS or a pilot. These quadcopters will offer faster response times by avoiding traffic and being able to reach even the most remote destinations.


twitter.com/TomorrowsCare


HUMANS STILL KEY


With technology quickly advancing every day, it is very likely that the future of healthcare will be largely reliant on digital automation and robotics. Medical professionals in the future will have to learn a range of new skills, including how to operate this new technology, and how to effectively deliver virtual appointments, diagnosis and treatment procedures. Medical professionals will also have to learn how to interpret data from patients' wearable devices, digital records and genome and DNA data, to make diagnoses, supported by AI technologies to increase efficiency.


However, while technology will feature heavily in the healthcare of the future, medical professionals will remain crucial in delivering care and will play a major role in treating patients who cannot or do not want access to the technology in place.


www.id-medical.com - 21 -


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