comparemela.com
Home
Live Updates
An essential medical device is failing people of color : comparemela.com
An essential medical device is failing people of color
Inaccurate pulse oximeter readings are more common in Black patients than non-Black ones. It was a problem that could be ignored — until COVID-19 hit.
Related Keywords
Michigan
,
United States
,
Los Angeles
,
California
,
Gauhati
,
Assam
,
India
,
San Francisco
,
Oakland
,
Compton
,
American
,
Corinne Purtill Los Angeles
,
Amy Moran Thomas
,
Michael Sjoding
,
Anupam Nath
,
Charles Davis
,
Al Seib Los Angeles
,
Jonathan Weissglass
,
Carolyn Fong
,
Noha Aboelata
,
Vargas Zamora
,
Richard Perry
,
Evelyn Rivas
,
Phil Bickler
,
Drug Administration
,
Walgreens
,
Drew University On
,
Uc San Francisco Hypoxia Lab
,
Charlesr Drew University
,
University Of Michigan
,
Centers For Disease
,
Institute For Advancing Health Equity
,
Sutter Health
,
Hypoxia Research Laboratory
,
Charlesr Drew University Of Medicine
,
Roots Community Health Center
,
Ge Healthcare
,
East Oakland
,
Disease Control
,
Chief Executive
,
New England Journal
,
South Los Angeles
,
Los Angeles Times
,
Research Laboratory
,
Advancing Health Equity
,
American Journal
,
Monk Skin Tone
,
Monk Skin Tone Scale
,
Skin Tone
,
Root October
,
Ja May Scott
,
comparemela.com © 2020. All Rights Reserved.