If you design medical devices and want to learn more about electronics, then join us on Design News Radio Tuesday, Feb. 21, at 2:00 p.m. EST.
"Embedded Angles for Medical Products" (register here) will consist of a live, streaming audio and online chat.
The Internet radio show will take place in the first half hour. Our guest will be Steven Dean, global healthcare segment lead for Freescale Semiconductor. An electronics engineer with more than 25 years of experience in the medical device and semiconductor fields, Dean will discuss the role of electronics in medical devices, ranging from heart monitoring systems to imaging machinery. He'll examine recent advances in semiconductor devices, and he will talk about how those advancements are leading to a new breed of medical products.
During our interview, you'll be able to type your questions for Dean via an instant chat window. We'll work some of those questions into our live discussion. At the half-hour mark, the radio portion will end, and Dean will engage listeners via the instant chat for an additional 30 minutes.
We invite you to register for "Embedded Angles for Medical Products" here, and we hope you enjoy the broadcast.
Click here to go to our DN radio archive, where you will find more shows/interviews with our knowledgeable editors and guests.
I agree, Chuck. As medical devices gain greater traction, it will likely help North American manufacturing. Medical device manufacturing is one of those few pockets of manufacturing that didn't try the outsourced model to any great degree. Chances are the manufacturing will continue to be centered in North America.
I agree that the industry will eventually reach agreement on a monetization model. Once that happens, it would seem natural for it to open the doors to a big new area of technology involving the use of sensors and wireless transceivers.
I would think the home devices get monetized as part of an admission-at-home program. The monitoring would be billed as a partial admission. It would be a way for medical facilities to extend their billable services without expanding facilities or hiring staff. My guess is the monetization will eventually be huge.
Home health care technology will really take off when the medical industry figures out how to monetize it. Right now, physicians seldom get paid for calling people on the phone.
These types of gadgets will just grow and grow. A combination of factors will likely push the growth: An aging population, an explosion in new devices, and the medical industry's desire to send healthcare home. If health pros can monitor the vitals of patients through devices, their facilities won't be as crowded.
A few years ago, I interviewed a cardiologist who told me that he received an e-mail from the defibrillator implanted inside one of his patients. He called up the patient, who was sleeping at the time, and told him, "Wake up. Your heart is in arrythmia. Better get to the hospital." To me, that's the ultimate in home medical care.
Excellent show, Chuck. Looks like we're about to see a real surge in personal medical devices. For those who missed the program, it will be available in the archive at: http://www.designnews.com/radio.asp?webinar_id=29801
Yes, I find it surprising as well. Yet my contacts at component distributors say the rush to Asia was based on the assumption that the savings were clearly there. What didn't get figured in, apparently, was the cost of hand-holding with plant managers, logistics, production difficulties. The logistics at first was not just a matter of shipping the product to markets (Europe and North America) but also shipping components to Asia that were not available in Asia. That part has changed a bit as the major component distributors opened up fully-stocked distribution centers in Asia. I think they also didn't take into account increasing labor costs.
Interesting point about the hidden statistic of companies not sending jobs to other countries. In any case, I think your key phrase there is "without thinking it through." I still, find it surprising (silly me) after all this time that companies can spend huge amounts of money making any knee-jerk decisions and doing anything without thinking it through.
Yes, Ann, I've noticed the increase in calls taken by Canada in the past couple years. Perhaps the biggest change in the shift away from outsourcing is not visible - many companies that have decided in recent years to not shift their production to Asia. One thing I keep hearing is that unlike 10 years ago, companies are spending more time analyzing whether a move to Asia really delivers benefits. Apparently, the rush to Asia (without thinking it through) has ended.
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