MedTech Week Magazine 2019 At a glance
Highlights from the 5th Edition of the Award-Winning MedTech Week Magazine
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I am particularly pleased to see so many examples of companies reaching out to their communities and engaging with employees – after all, medtech is really about people rather than technology.
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Bringing Sound & Vision to the message
Articles
Perspectives
The best breast cancer treatment for you
No two women are the same, and neither are their breast cancers. Cutting-edge genomic tests can be valuable tools for determining the best treatment for you.
Getting back in the game
Osteoarthritis led to an imbalance and damaged cartilage, but my total hip replacement surgery enabled me to continue my career.
How to keep smiling when you live with Atrial Fibrillation
As someone in their 70s with Atrial Fibrillation (AF), I couldn’t think of anything but my disease – until I was advised to have a minimally-invasive new procedure.
‘It’s not just a pacemaker, but a smile-maker and a dream-maker’
I am 38-year-old editor and a keen athlete from Costa Rica. In January 2015, I woke up with a terrible headache, but managed to go to work. Around midday my headache retuned with such force that it knocked me out.
The comfort of recovering at home
I developed life-threatening blood poisoning, requiring intravenous (IV) antibiotic treatment. After being hooked up to a drip in hospital for three weeks, I had had enough.
'Riding the tide of kidney disease'
I had been managing kidney disease for my entire adult life – but that hasn’t stopped me pursuing my passion for caravanning and kite surfing.
A remarkable recovery from a severe stroke
At the age of 33, I was paralysed on my left-hand-side and struggling to speak, following a stroke in the early hours of the morning. After a minimally-invasive procedure, the clot was removed and I walked out of hospital within 24 hours without symptoms.
‘TAVI transformed my life’
I thought my breathlessness and fatigue were part of the ageing process, but the symptoms were due to a serious heart condition.
The comfort of recovering at home
I developed life-threatening blood poisoning, requiring intravenous (IV) antibiotic treatment. After being hooked up to a drip in hospital for three weeks, I had had enough.
David John Watson
Patient Advocate
My wife said I was becoming ‘institutionalised’ – I just knew that I didn’t like being there. The doctor mentioned that rather than staying in hospital for another three weeks, there was an option that would get me back home sooner: Outpatient Parenteral Antimicrobial Therapy, or OPAT.
It’s for patients like me who doctors judge to be ‘medically stable’ but need to continue IV antibiotics. It means we can complete our treatment in our own homes. They asked my wife and I if we’d be able to cope with it and we said we would. The next day, one of the nurses from the OPAT team came to show us what we’d have to do.
We were worried silly about it the first time but it is such an easy thing to do. Josie would get her apron and rubber gloves on, take the infusion out of the fridge, then we’d remove the old bottle and just fix the new bottle onto the tube on the infusion pump connected to my arm. And that was it, basically, for 24 hours.
Josie believes that being treated at home sped up my recovery. I reckon it gave me a new lease on life. I was glad to be out of the hospital, in my home environment. To be honest, once everything was connected, I forgot it was there most of the time. It’s there during the day and just carry on as normal. Absolutely brilliant.
What is OPAT?
OPAT is a method for delivering parenteral antimicrobials in the outpatient setting under safe conditions (community or home), as an alternative to inpatient care. It allows patients to go from hospital to home earlier with a pre-filled elastomeric pump, in order to provide drug administration out of the hospital under safe conditions.