Two years ago, Dutch surgeon and sustainability champion Laurens van Houte threw out what seemed like a counter-intuitive notion for cutting greenhouse gas emissions.
Medtechs Are Fully Engaged In Climate Change: ‘They Have No Choice’
European Industry Meeting Pulls No Punches About Scale Of The Challenge
The E in ESG: SUDs, reuse, disposables, refurbishing, reprocessed devices? Multiple panelists at the 2024 MedTech Forum addressed the role medtech manufacturers should have in the climate change challenge.

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Chaos continues at the FDA’s device center as reinstated staffers begin daily commutes to comply with the administration’s return to office policy. Staffers can no longer publicly share their pronouns per Trump’s “Defending Women” executive order.
10XBeta is helping to develop a modular mobile health care platform as part of a federal initiative to improve the quality of care in rural areas. Company CEO Marcel Botha told Medtech Insight that the product fits the company’s goals of bringing treatment to the people who need it most.
Two US FDA device center websites have been restored under a restraining order. The pages now carry a disclaimer alleging they include "extremely inaccurate" content about gender; however, neither site includes any substantive discussion of trans issues.
The 12 initial awards, which total almost $100m, are part of an ongoing program to develop a high-tech mobile hospital that can reach patients with limited access to health care.
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The General Services Administration’s updated list of “assets identified for accelerated disposition” does not include any buildings at the agency’s headquarters in White Oak, MD after its original list of “non-core” government properties for disposal had more than half the buildings on campus.
Exer Labs Inc.’s website marketed its AI-based Exer Scan app to “screen and treat Parkinson’s, TB, Cerebral Palsy and more.” But those claims went well beyond what was allowed under the product’s 510(k) clearance, US regulators say.
Early diagnosis can be “detrimental” to patients, Suzanne O'Sullivan, neurologist and author of “The Age of Diagnosis,” argued at the Wired Health conference on 18 March. "You save one life from screening 2,000 women for breast cancer, but you also treat 10 women unnecessarily," she said.