Enhancing Clinical Trials Through Increased Compensation and Health Data Brokering

Nathan E Botts 0 301 Article rating: No rating

Increasing participation and success for trial participants

Clinical trials are the backbone of medical research, driving the development of new treatments and advancing our understanding of various diseases. However, the success of these trials heavily relies on the engagement and support of participants. Many potential participants face significant financial barriers that deter them from enrolling or continuing in clinical trials. Increased compensation for participation and innovative approaches to managing personal health data, such as Health eProfiles, can address these challenges, leading to more efficient and effective clinical research.

Have you considered your privacy rights when using birth control apps?

Nathan E Botts 1 21778 Article rating: 5.0

With a May 2024 update from the FTC on a pregnancy app that shared users’ sensitive information

Abstract from the article titled, "Before Using Birth Control Apps Consider Your Privacy" posted on Wired.com: "Natural Cycles’ privacy policy states that in using the app each user grants the company and any of its partners broad rights to “use, reproduce, distribute, modify, adapt, prepare derivative works of, publicly display, publicly perform, communicate to the public, and otherwise utilize and exploit a user's anonymized information.”

FDA Warns Against Using Unauthorized Smartwatches and Rings for Blood Glucose Measurement

Nathan E Botts 0 1412 Article rating: No rating

The FDA has not authorized, cleared, or approved any smartwatch or smart ring

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has issued a safety communication advising against the use of smartwatches or smart rings that claim to measure blood glucose levels without piercing the skin. This warning is directed at consumers, patients, caregivers, and healthcare providers, emphasizing that the FDA has not authorized, cleared, or approved any such devices for this purpose. The alert distinguishes these products from smartwatch applications that display data from FDA-authorized devices, such as continuous glucose monitoring devices (CGMs), which do require skin piercing. The FDA's concern stems from the potential for inaccurate blood glucose measurements provided by these unauthorized devices, which could lead to serious errors in diabetes management. Such inaccuracies could result in taking incorrect doses of insulin or other medications, leading to dangerously low glucose levels, mental confusion, coma, or even death.

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