Tag: World Health Organization

At CES 2024, women’s health on show, a little; check out Cerviray AI, cooling mattress, more
Technology

At CES 2024, women’s health on show, a little; check out Cerviray AI, cooling mattress, more

[ad_1] Among the more than 3,500 booths at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas, only a few focus exclusively on women's health, including a cervical cancer screening device and a wristband to anticipate hot flushes. South Korea's Aidot presented Cerviray AI, which enables remote screening for uterine cancer with the help of artificial intelligence. According to the World Health Organization, it is the fourth most common cancer in women with around 570,000 new cases and around 311,000 deaths reported worldwide in 2018. Yet uterine cancer is one of the easiest forms of cancer to prevent and treat, if detected early enough and treated effectively. But if the diagnosis is made too late, the outcome is usually fatal.Aidot hopes to boost screening worldwide with its device, based...
Starlink internet for ‘recognised’ organisations in Gaza: Musk
Technology

Starlink internet for ‘recognised’ organisations in Gaza: Musk

[ad_1] Billionaire Elon Musk on Saturday said that his Starlink satellite service would support internet access for "internationally recognised aid organisations in Gaza," which have faced a telecommunications blackout since Friday.Starlink is a network of satellites in low Earth orbit that can provide internet to remote locations, or areas that have had normal communications infrastructure disabled. Musk, who owns Starlink operator SpaceX, was responding to a post by US Democrat congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez in which she called the communications blackout in Gaza "unacceptable". We are now on WhatsApp. Click to join."Starlink will support connectivity to internationally recognised aid organisations in Gaza," Musk wrote on X, formerly Twitter, which he also owns.Head of the Wor...
AI could halve time reading breast cancer scans, study suggests
Technology

AI could halve time reading breast cancer scans, study suggests

[ad_1] Artificial intelligence could help almost halve the workload of radiologists when it comes to searching routine scans for signs of breast cancer, a large Swedish study suggested on Wednesday.The interim results of the trial were hailed as promising, but the authors cautioned that more research was needed before AI can be used to screen for breast cancer on a wider scale. While increasingly convincing chatbots such as ChatGPT have driven speculation about the future potential applications of AI, one area in which the technology has already shown proficiency is in reading medical scans. With many countries suffering from a shortage of radiologists, there are hopes that AI could make the time-consuming job of analysing routine scans quicker and more accurate.This could have a partic...