Ebola is rare, deadly and highly contagious. Since the Ebola virus can be passed through bodily fluids like saliva and mucus, as well as an infected patient’s sweat, medical staff treating the infected parties have to bundle up in several layers of protective gear in order to ensure they themselves do not become infected. Which brings us to the problem of patient charts – how can you keep track of patient data when anything you take into the hot zone becomes immediately contaminated? This obviously rules out the use of computers or tablets, and even paper and pen have to be destroyed once they’ve entered a contaminated zone. Doctors up to now have been working around this by shouting patient data over makeshift barricades to avoid spreading the contagion, but it is still highly inefficient. So Jay Achar, part of the French organization Medecins Sans Frontieres (Doctors Without Borders) decided something had to be done. Someone at MSF reached out to Google for help and they responded with a whole new piece of technology: a tablet that allowed doctors to maintain patient charts and could be de-contaminated as needed.
Google Has Devised an ‘Ebola-proof’ Tablet
Ebola is rare, deadly and highly contagious. Since the Ebola virus can be passed through bodily fluids like saliva and mucus, as well as an infected patient’s sweat, medical staff treating the infected parties have to bundle up in several layers of protective gear in order to ensure they themselves do not become infected. Which brings us to the problem of patient charts – how can you keep track of patient data when anything you take into the hot zone becomes immediately contaminated? This obviously rules out the use of computers or tablets, and even paper and pen have to be destroyed once they’ve entered a contaminated zone. Doctors up to now have been working around this by shouting patient data over makeshift barricades to avoid spreading the contagion, but it is still highly inefficient. So Jay Achar, part of the French organization Medecins Sans Frontieres (Doctors Without Borders) decided something had to be done. Someone at MSF reached out to Google for help and they responded with a whole new piece of technology: a tablet that allowed doctors to maintain patient charts and could be de-contaminated as needed.
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