Plan To ‘Reopen’ America Gradually Allows Return Of Elective Orthopedic, Colon, Eye Surgeries

Companies making related devices could see renewals in sales

Under guidelines recently unveiled by President Trump, US health care facilities could gradually start phasing-in more elective surgeries, including commonly performed operations that were postponed due the COVID-19 outbreak – many of which involve extensive device use. Elective surgeries include orthopedic joint replacement procedures, colonoscopies and cataract-correcting procedures that could resume as early as May under Trump’s plan.

Medical illustration of the implantation of the bone joints in the human skeleton. Layout of implants, artificial joints, in different parts of the human body
Hospitals may start rescheduling elective surgeries they postponed in March and April, said US President Donald Trump in his plan to restart American businesses

US President Donald Trump recently issued a plan and recommendations for normalizing American life amid the coronavirus outbreak. Called “Opening Up America Again,” the effort includes a phased-in approach from the administration as to when elective surgeries can resume.

As a general rule of thumb, elective surgeries – which were delayed or canceled over the past two months so...

Read the full article – start your free trial today!

Join thousands of industry professionals who rely on Medtech Insight for daily insights

  • Start your 7-day free trial
  • Explore trusted news, analysis, and insights
  • Access comprehensive global coverage
  • Enjoy instant access – no credit card required

More from Oncology

HistoSonics’ Edison System Gains Limited UK Access, While Awaiting CE Marking

 
• By 

While HistoSonics is awaiting the CE mark in Europe, it hit a major milestone by securing early limited market access in Great Britain under a Unmet Clinical Need Authorization (UCNA), bringing its noninvasive histotripsy treatment to patients with liver tumors.

Digital Health Roundup: Synchron Syncs With Apple, Ketryx’s AI Agents, AdvaMed’s AI RoadMap

In this week's Digital Health Roundup, MedTech Insight's Shubham Singh explores how Ketryx's launch of validated AI agents could reshape compliance automation in medtech. Marion Webb highlights news from BCI makers Synchron, Axoft and Subsense. Elizabeth Orr discusses AI advances at the FDA.

Guardant’s Multi-Cancer Detection Test Granted FDA Breakthrough Device Designation

 

Guardant Health’s methylation-based blood test – Shield MCD – showed a specificity of 98.6% and sensitivity of 75% across eight cancer types in its clinical validation data presented at ASCO.

DeepLook AI Imaging Provides A Deeper Look At Dense Breast

 

DeepLook Medical recently announced the commercial rollout of DL Precise, an AI-powered imaging platform that enhances breast cancer screening, at major healthcare institutions across the US.

More from Device Area

Abbott Launches Next-Gen Delivery System For Proclaim DRG Neurostim

 
• By 

Allen Burton, Abbott’s medical director of neuromodulation told Medtech Insight that the delivery system was developed to make the procedure easier for physicians, especially those who perform the implantations infrequently.

Digital Health Roundup: Synchron Syncs With Apple, Ketryx’s AI Agents, AdvaMed’s AI RoadMap

In this week's Digital Health Roundup, MedTech Insight's Shubham Singh explores how Ketryx's launch of validated AI agents could reshape compliance automation in medtech. Marion Webb highlights news from BCI makers Synchron, Axoft and Subsense. Elizabeth Orr discusses AI advances at the FDA.

Guardant’s Multi-Cancer Detection Test Granted FDA Breakthrough Device Designation

 

Guardant Health’s methylation-based blood test – Shield MCD – showed a specificity of 98.6% and sensitivity of 75% across eight cancer types in its clinical validation data presented at ASCO.