Introducing CleveMed Blogs
Friday, November 21st, 2008A couple of years ago I joined this medical device venture to design interface layouts, determine color schemes, spruce up fonts and wild the caliper of CSS. Since then, the reign of icy-perfect, lisp-free and corporate became passé and socially active sites (a.k.a. blogs and wikis) took hold. So, it is with unrestrained excitement that I announce this call to engage!
This blog is for you if you are:
- A Clinician specializing in Sleep Medicine, Neurology, Pulmonology, ENT, Cardiology and Anesthesiology
- A University Professor in the fields of engineering and health sciences, specifically biomedical engineering, electrical and computer engineering, physiology, anatomy, biology, nursing, etc.
- A Sleep Lab Manager or PSG Tech
- A Researcher, independent or university based, who uses or has a need for wireless physiological data acquisition equipment
- A part of a pharmaceutical company or involved in pharma trial development
- A Movement Disorder Specialist, specifically involved with Parkinson’s disease, looking for ways to objectively quantify the severity of your patients’ motor symptoms
- “Googlers” interested in sleep apnea, home sleep testing, sleep labs, other sleep disorders diagnosis and therapy, Parkinson’s disease symptom monitoring, wireless motion analysis, innovative data acquisition tools, new medical device offerings, advancements in the medical device industry
- Patients who suffer from a sleep disorder or movement disorder interested in learning about the latest devices being used in the field
- Anyone interested in relevant discussion and engagement
CleveMed Blogs will feature posts from several of CleveMed’s experts on various topics so please check regularly to see what new information is being presented. But we don’t want to ramble on pretentiously with the vain imagination that we can have a discussion/exchange all on our own. What would you like to see addressed and discussed here? Your questions, suggestions and comments are all welcome.
I am asking that you engage.
And thanks for reading this maiden post on the brand new CleveMed Blogs!