The practice of drawing blood has changed very little over the decades. It looks about the same now as it did 50 years ago. That process, however, may be about to get a modern makeover.
Several health systems across the US are gearing up to try a new way of drawing blood: using a robot.Health systems have agreed to be part of a clinical trial of a device that automates blood ...
Karius has addressed these hurdles to develop a commercial test that allows rapid, accurate detection of more than 1,000 pathogens from a standard blood draw. The Karius Test has broad ...
The King County Sheriff’s Office (KCSO) is launching a new Law Enforcement Phlebotomy Program (LEPP) that will allow specially trained deputies to conduct evidentiary blood draws in impaired driving ...
The Aletta device has a 95% success rate when it comes to drawing usable blood on the first attempt, according to the company ...
CHICAGO — The practice of drawing blood has changed very little over the decades. It looks about the same now as it did 50 years ago. That process, however, may be about to get a modern makeover.