Dear Subscriber,
SunTech Medical is traveling the globe in the weeks ahead to provide our customers and partners a chance to meet with us face to face. Find us in China at CMEF, in the US at AHA, or in Germany at Medica! Get the details below and, as always, be sure to check out our blog site for more information on blood pressure measurement and other industry news. |
Mortara Instruments (Booth 738) to Feature SunTech Tango+ at AHA Scientific Sessions 2010
|
November 14-16, 2010
SunTech Medical will have a representative in the Mortara booth (#738) at the 2010 AHA Scientific Sessions for an "Ask the Expert" session to demonstrate the use, features and value of adding automated BP to a stress test. The Tango+ Cardiac Stress BP Device will be on display with the Mortara X-Scribe stress system. Contact our rep now to schedule your live demo or to stop by and speak with us.
|
Automated Versus Manual BP Measurement: Which is Better?
|
2 Part Series posted by Kent Lupino, Sr. Product Manager
What's a clinician to do? Debates about clinical trials, patient populations, and statistical analyses can seem hollow and distant when looking at an anxious patient in an exam room. At that moment, all that matters is what's best for your patient. Yet clinically relevant data, and more importantly, rigorous discussion of that data, is the means to the end. Professional clinicians quite often need the former in order to effectively deliver the latter. To wit, two similar journal articles were recently published that arrived at two very different conclusions. Let's take a look...
|
Partner Update: Athena GTX Receives FDA Clearance on Innovative Compact Monitor
|
Press Release
Athena GTX®, a developer of innovative trauma care products, has received clearance from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for the WVSM™ device, its new compact, patient-worn vital signs monitor.
Originally developed for the U.S. military, the WVSM™ is an innovative device that automatically measures blood pressure, pulse rate, blood oxygenation, and critical cardiac functions from point of injury through transport to a treatment center. Feedback from military testing revealed that early monitoring, trending, and recording of vital signs improve the survival rates of soldiers.
|