eDevice Receives Tadi Award for the Design of Its New HealthGO Mini Platform

eDeviceHealthGO Mini is a healthcare device directly installed at patients' homes, transmitting vital signs (i.e. blood pressure, weight, oxygen saturation) to medical information systems through the secure eDevice mobile network. HealthGO Mini communicates with medical sensors via Bluetooth or USB. It can be combined with a tablet, offering a powerful user interface for medical applications such as Q&A for disease management.

eDevice has been awarded the renowned Tadi Award for the design of its HealthGO Mini. It also rewards the company's successful strategy that combines technological innovation and investments in product design. This approach allowed eDevice to differentiate itself in the booming market of eHealth and to become the leading provider of Remote Patient Monitoring solutions for healthcare device manufacturers.

Stéphane Schinazi, CEO of eDevice, declares: "The specific needs of chronically-ill patients, the home-and-office environment of our products and the market's regulatory requirements are three key factors that pushed eDevice to place the product design at the core of its strategy. For five years now, we’ve been working closely with the recognized and award-winning French designer Didier Garrigos. Together, we created ergonomic, easy-to-use medical products for patients and elderly people, while keeping a compact and unobtrusive form factor that perfectly blends into the lifestyle of the end-user."

Several innovating products emerged from this collaboration, from the WireX network converter, to the medical platform family HealthGO. More than 200,000 active products are deployed in 150 different countries across the globe, including in the United States where eDevice generates most of its revenue, this year reaching a steady triple digits growth rate.

These incredible results will reflect in new job opportunities within several departments at eDevice, including several new Engineer positions to be filled in 2016.

About eDevice
At the crossroads of telecom and medical fields, eDevice pioneered the Telehealth connectivity space. Since 2002, several market leaders have relied on eDevice to provide solutions that securely and safely transmit medical data between their patients and their systems, with continuous growth and more than 200,000 patients connected with eDevice technology. Based in Bordeaux, France, eDevice's team of experts enables the company to continue steady and profitable growth. Dedicated to quality, eDevice is ISO-9001 and ISO-13485 certified for design, production, marketing of modems and communicating equipment, and provision of global network telecommunication and data transmission services. eDevice develops solutions for M2M and eHealth connectivity, including Telehealth hubs, network converters, cellular modems, and 3G modules. The company also provides secure cellular network access, cellular data management services, as well as medical data storage and front-end application services for Remote Patient Monitoring. Through partnership with technology leaders, the company brings innovative connectivity solutions to medical device manufacturers.

Most Popular Now

ChatGPT can Produce Medical Record Notes…

The AI model ChatGPT can write administrative medical notes up to ten times faster than doctors without compromising quality. This is according to a new study conducted by researchers at...

Alcidion and Novari Health Forge Strateg…

Alcidion Group Limited, a leading provider of FHIR-native patient flow solutions for healthcare, and Novari Health, a market leader in waitlist management and referral management technologies, have joined forces to...

Greater Manchester Reaches New Milestone…

Radiologists and radiographers at Northern Care Alliance NHS Foundation Trust have become the first in Greater Manchester to use the Sectra picture archiving and communication system (PACS) to report on...

Can Language Models Read the Genome? Thi…

The same class of artificial intelligence that made headlines coding software and passing the bar exam has learned to read a different kind of text - the genetic code. That code...

Study Shows Human Medical Professionals …

When looking for medical information, people can use web search engines or large language models (LLMs) like ChatGPT-4 or Google Bard. However, these artificial intelligence (AI) tools have their limitations...

Advancing Drug Discovery with AI: Introd…

A transformative study published in Health Data Science, a Science Partner Journal, introduces a groundbreaking end-to-end deep learning framework, known as Knowledge-Empowered Drug Discovery (KEDD), aimed at revolutionizing the field...

Bayer and Google Cloud to Accelerate Dev…

Bayer and Google Cloud announced a collaboration on the development of artificial intelligence (AI) solutions to support radiologists and ultimately better serve patients. As part of the collaboration, Bayer will...

Shared Digital NHS Prescribing Record co…

Implementing a single shared digital prescribing record across the NHS in England could avoid nearly 1 million drug errors every year, stopping up to 16,000 fewer patients from being harmed...

Ask Chat GPT about Your Radiation Oncolo…

Cancer patients about to undergo radiation oncology treatment have lots of questions. Could ChatGPT be the best way to get answers? A new Northwestern Medicine study tested a specially designed ChatGPT...

Wanted: Young Talents. DMEA Sparks Bring…

9 - 11 April 2024, Berlin, Germany. The digital health industry urgently needs skilled workers, which is why DMEA sparks focuses on careers, jobs and supporting young people. Against the backdrop of...

North West Anglia Works with Clinisys to…

North West Anglia NHS Foundation Trust has replaced two, legacy laboratory information systems with a single instance of Clinisys WinPath. The trust, which serves a catchment of 800,000 patients in North...

Can AI Techniques Help Clinicians Assess…

Investigators have applied artificial intelligence (AI) techniques to gait analyses and medical records data to provide insights about individuals with leg fractures and aspects of their recovery. The study, published in...