In a few hundred years, doctors will be evaluating their patient with a handheld device known as a tricorder to diagnose any disease honestly. This is consistent with Star Trek. Having returned here, in the 21st century, it is not now assumed that we are even a little closer to this utopian generation. But we cannot go as far as you think. It's in tune with XPRIZE's opposition inspired by a long show.
In search of a real clinical tricorder, in 2012, the XPRIZE
Foundation partnered with Qualcomm, a wholly based San Diego-based company, to
launch the XPRIZE tricorder. And recently XPRIZE announced the winner.
The contestants asked the contestants to create a Tricorder
tool that would diagnose 12 different diseases and detect the main signs in
real time using a handy handheld tool. Such a device could be an important step
towards democratizing healthcare, making fully reliable home diagnostics
available to anyone anywhere in the world.
The nature of health care is currently sporadic and
reactive; we go to the doctor as soon as we get sick or injured. What if, on
the other hand, medical care was continuous and proactive, focusing more on
stopping the infection in the first region rather than on treating it once it
has manifested itself?
Devices like the Tricorder are expected to keep patients
healthy as well as reduce the burden on healthcare workers. The current shortage
of doctors, especially in rural and remote areas, is likely to worsen at the
destination.
The three main rules of the competition were as follows:
1. Each group could use their own approach to design their
tricorder, but the finished product had to weigh five kilograms or less.
2. Tricorders must be able to diagnose 10 critical health
conditions, including anemia, diabetes and pneumonia; Desire to have 3 optional
fitness conditions on the list, including hypertension, cancer, and shingles
and 5 indicated important signs and symptoms.
3. Every Tricorder must include the ability for consumers to
enter basic fitness stats, be remotely accessible over the Internet, and have
the same mindset as any mobile phone or tablet.
It sounds complicated, but 312 teams from 38 countries of
the world have coped with this task. After narrowing the competition down and
honing their technologies for five years, a winner and runner-up were selected
last week and they offered $ 2.5 million and $ 1 million for their paintings, respectively.
Final Frontier Medical Devices, based primarily in
Pennsylvania, ranked # 1 for the number of devices called the DxtER. DxtER uses
tough, fast, non-invasive sensors to check key signs and symptoms, body
chemistry and organ function, and extracts statistics from clinical emergency
medicine. These statistics are synthesized by a synthetic intelligence engine,
and DxtER presents a forecast that it claims is concise and accurate.
The team becomes a family business, usually made up of
brothers George and Basil Harris, an engineer and a physician respectively.
They were assisted by their sister, who runs health insurance, and their
brother, who is a practicing urologist. Although anyone who worked in the
mission had regular activities elsewhere, they set unpaid hours on evenings and
weekends to bring their vision of the Tricorder to life.
The Taiwan Dynamic Biomarkers Group, a research group from
the country's National Central University, came in second with its prototype
telephone tool that combines diagnostic algorithms with analytical techniques.
The three-module apparatus consists of a Vital-Sense smart monitor, a smart
blood and urine test kit, and a smart oscilloscope module, each of which
connects wirelessly to a finished phone with an app that guides the user.
Consumer using diagnostic tests.
In the final round of the opposition, two groups were
required to prepare forty-five test kits to ensure that the kits could be used
by non-clinical experts. The kits have been tested by customers and enjoyed the
diagnosis and have been evaluated in terms of disease diagnosis, main symptoms
and customer satisfaction.