Computers don’t rubberneck. They don’t fight with their spouses during the evening commute. They are more consistent, predictable, and less distracted. But in the case of an emergency, how else might a driverless car help you?
Read MoreAmnesty International launched the “death clock” in Times Square in New York City. The clock is counting to 358,000—the United Nations’ newest estimate of the number of women who die every year from pregnancy-related causes, which include unsafe abortions.
Read MoreLast week, NPR reported a major humanitarian group’s decision to stop treating patients from detention centers in Misrata, Libya. According to the report, “torture was so rampant that some detainees were brought for care only to make them fit for further interrogation.”
Read MoreSince 2004, at least 15 African countries have passed new legislation making it a crime to transmit HIV, and in some cases, to expose a person to the virus.
Read MoreNearly 800,000 strokes happen in the United States each year.[1] Like heart attacks, strokes are time-sensitive emergencies. Nearly two million neurons are at risk of permanent damage for every minute that elapses until the blocked artery is opened up and circulation is restored, meaning “time is brain” during a stroke.
Read MoreNew technologies, including advances in remote monitoring systems, offer the promise of transforming the delivery of EMS, impacting everything from dispatch to treatment and diagnosis in the prehospital setting and moving EMS toward a more predictive, rather than reactive, response model.
Read MoreThe U.S. healthcare system has been criticized as fragmented, inefficient and costly. But Eric Beck, DO, MPH, president and CEO of Evolution Health in Dallas, and his staff are proving it doesn’t have to be. They’re building new models of team-based delivery and processes that offer patients and providers a better experience.
Read MoreBrent Myers, MD, worked at Wake County EMS in Raleigh, NC, for more than a decade. and has been widely recognized for his work to build a mobile integrated healthcare program there to offer in-home care, care referrals and a better system for treating people with mental illness.
Read MoreFor many people who don’t work in the EMS industry, the inner working of the ambulance system is a black box. We hope we never need an ambulance, but we understand if we have a medical emergency we can call 911 and an ambulance will show up at our door.
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