Six people, including a 4yearold boy, were thrown out on to the Atlantic City expressway. A woman we spoke with who asked not to be named says show came upon the scene in the wilkesbarre lane within westbound lanes in hamilton township. A child was laying on the righthand side of the road being helped by a driver from the car in front of me. There was a woman laying in the road on the left and other people laying in the middle of the highway. Reporter state police say 35yearold james dennis was killed in the accident. He was riding in the cab with the child and the driver, 45yearold roselyn kornegay, both of whom were critically hurt. Authorities say two men and a woman were illegally riding in the bed of the truck. They suffered less serious injuries. Being all six passengers were ejected, its safe to say they were not wearing their safety belts. Their clothes and lots and lots of beer cans. It was a horrible mess, terrible tragedy. Reporter investigators dont know if alcohol was a fa
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by Michela Kane May 25, 2021 .
DURHAM – Smartwatches and other wearable devices may be used to sense illness, dehydration and even changes to the red blood cell count, according to biomedical engineers and genomics researchers at Duke University and the Stanford University School of Medicine.
The researchers say that, with the help of machine learning, wearable device data on heart rate, body temperature and daily activities may be used to predict health measurements that are typically observed during a clinical blood test. The study appears in Nature Medicine on May 24, 2021.
During a doctor’s office visit, a medical worker usually measures a patient’s vital signs, including their height, weight, temperature and blood pressure. Although this information is filed away in a person’s long-term health record, it isn’t usually used to create a diagnosis. Instead, physicians will order a clinical lab, which tests a patient’s urine or blood, to gather specific biological
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Credit: Michaela Kane, Duke University
DURHAM, N.C. Smartwatches and other wearable devices may be used to sense illness, dehydration and even changes to the red blood cell count, according to biomedical engineers and genomics researchers at Duke University and the Stanford University School of Medicine.
The researchers say that, with the help of machine learning, wearable device data on heart rate, body temperature and daily activities may be used to predict health measurements that are typically observed during a clinical blood test. The study appears in
Nature Medicine on May 24, 2021.
During a doctor s office visit, a medical worker usually measures a patient s vital signs, including their height, weight, temperature and blood pressure. Although this information is filed away in a person s long-term health record, it isn t usually used to create a diagnosis. Instead, physicians will order a clinical lab, which tests a patient s urine or blood, to gather specific
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