New Innovative Medical Breakthroughs that Are Changing Healthcare

Pat Stricker, RN, MEd
Senior Vice President
TCS Healthcare Technologies

There are so many changes in healthcare that it is hard to keep up with all the new treatments, therapies, medications, procedures, and medical equipment that are being developed. Many of these are the result of new technologies, but others are innovative ways to use simple, known techniques in a new way to make significant changes. This article will review some of the current and future technologies that are changing or will change the healthcare landscape.  Hopefully you will find some that you were not aware of or some that might be helpful for some of you patients.  
 
Now let’s take a look at what may be in store for us in the near future. The following is only a small list of some of the unbelievable advances and innovations that are being worked on. As technology and computerization continue to advance, there will be more amazing treatments and procedures available.

The following innovations are based on suggestions from a panel of doctors and researchers at Cleveland Clinics that identified medical innovations for 2019 that would transform the medical field and change healthcare.

Other innovations that are on the horizon to revolutionize medicine include:

The following are cutting-edge medical super-tools that were included in “2019 Medical Breakthroughs: Move Easier, Feel Better, Live Longer” article by Jacqueline Detwiler that was in the October/November, 2019 issue of the AARP Magazine, page 44. They are arranged in groups of like-topics.

Bone Grafts — Researchers have found a way to add calcium-rich eggshells to a hydrogel mixture that allows them to form a frame where new bone can develop from bone cells, making bone grafts more effective in treating osteoporosis and other skeletal damage. 

Cancer

Chronic Constipation — This condition may be treated in the future with pills that vibrate while moving through the GI tract. The vibrating pills induce natural peristalsis, moving stool through the body without chemical action.

Circadian-Rhythm Tests and Treatments
Circadian rhythms affect us and our bodily functions more than we realize, as evidence by some of the following studies on mood, sleeping, activity, eating, taking medications, the importance of light, etc. There is now a cell phone app called myCircadianClock that can help you identify your circadian rhythm and how to synchronize your body clock with the outside world. Check it out at mycircadianclock.org.

Depression:  A Mood Adjusting Spray — Depression treatments frequently work for a time and then stop or are less effective as time goes by. A nasal spray called Spravato (Esketamine), recently approved by the FDA, can be used with an oral anti-depressant for patients with treatment-resistant depression. Some participants have found that there was no “off” time and it is still working after 2 years.     

Diabetes

Exercise Can Help Prevent a Second Fall — A study of 345 men and women 70 and older showed that participants cut their risk of a second fall by 36% by following the Otago Exercise Program, a series of 5 strengthening and 12 balance moves with increasing levels of difficulty. The program focuses on knee, hip, and ankle strengthening and overall balance.

Heart Disease: A Whole-Life Longevity Plan — A program developed by Dean Ornish, the developer of the Ornish Diet, has created a holistic 9-week lifestyle intervention course to help people reverse serious heart disease. It includes four rules: eat a low-fat, plant-based diet; get regular exercise; manage stress with yoga and meditation; and maintain love and intimacy. Within one month of completing the pilot study, the ten participants showed cardiac function improvement. One, who had been evaluated for a heart transplant, had a 27% reduction of his blocked arteries and has made amazing overall progress. The program is available in 18 states and is being approved by some insurance companies.

Light Therapy

More Comfortable Mammograms — New mammogram machines allow patients to control the compression of their own breasts, which can result in clearer pictures with less stress and pain. One study showed that 91% of the patients gave themselves equal or greater compression over the previous year’s scan, which improved the images.

Parkinson’s - Less Invasive Treatment for Tremors — Deep brain stimulation, the gold standard for treatment of patients with Parkinson’s tremors that don’t respond to medication, is effective about 90% of the time. However, it requires a surgery to implant the electrodes in the brain. Last year the FDA approved a safer, noninvasive MRI Exablate Neuro treatment that guides ultra-sound waves directly to the most affected areas of the brain and destroys misfiring cells without requiring surgery. 

Robotic Undergarments — An undergarment with robotic muscles that was originally designed to enhance soldiers’ endurance, can augment core strength by about 25%. Each garment is customized to fit an individual’s lifestyle and issues, providing support to core muscles, legs and hips, and back. They are available in the Seattle area and some elderly communities and companies are providing them to members and employees to lease for $1,000 to $1,500. 

10,000 Steps a Day — The standard goal of 10,000 steps a day isn’t based on science. It was related to a 1964 Tokyo Olympics marketing effort. Researchers worked with 17,000 women (average age: 72) to determine how many steps are needed in older adults to lower their risk of dying from all causes. They were asked to record their steps for at least 10 hours a day, four days a week. They found that mortality rates began to drop at 4,400 steps and leveled off at 7,500 steps. So you can rest a little and not feel like you have to push yourself to get to 10,000 steps – 7,500 may be enough.  However, the more you do, the better it is for your health.