Showing posts with label smart pills. Show all posts
Showing posts with label smart pills. Show all posts

Monday, 18 January 2010

Swallowing Your Medicine

There is an interesting article in this week's Economist  about smart pills - intelligent, ingestible devices which can can relay data to other devices outside the body, and thus onwards to medical practitioners. Eventually all pills and capsules might be tracked this way.(http://www.economist.com/businessfinance/displaystory.cfm?story_id=15276730, subscription may be required).

The pill technology has been thoroughly developed, but it looks like the budget for the receiver device was sacrificed (see left).  Photo: aeu04117

On a serious note, this stuff could be a step forward. It is thought that at least a third of prescription drugs are not taken correctly, or at all.  This leads to revenue losses for drug companies but also, more importantly, to sub-optimal treatment for the patient. Any device that can aid timely administration of medicines should help to improve treatment outcomes and thus lower healthcare costs overall.

Positive benefits:
Closer medical supervision; better patient compliance with dosage regimens; easier identification of adverse events

Negatives:
Potential for privacy intrusion; repeated texts and emails from MegaCorp/your doctor/your mother, asking you why you haven't taken your dose of PanaceaRx today.

One of the applications mentioned in the article is a service launched by a telco in Mexico which allows customers to determine whether they have influenza by using their mobile phone. Barring any eye-watering iPhone rectal thermometer app, I 'm not sure how this works.  Having had H1N1 flu this summer, I can confirm that a four dollar digital thermometer (sub-lingual) is all you need.