vimarsana.com
Home
Live Updates
An essential medical device is failing people of color : vimarsana.com
An essential medical device is failing people of color : vimarsana.com
An essential medical device is failing people of color
Inaccurate pulse oximeter readings are more common in Black patients than non-Black ones. It was a problem that could be ignored — until COVID-19 hit.
Related Keywords
Michigan ,
United States ,
Los Angeles ,
California ,
Gauhati ,
Assam ,
India ,
San Francisco ,
Oakland ,
Compton ,
American ,
Corinne Purtill Los Angeles ,
Amy Moran Thomas ,
Michael Sjoding ,
Anupam Nath ,
Charles Davis ,
Al Seib Los Angeles ,
Jonathan Weissglass ,
Carolyn Fong ,
Noha Aboelata ,
Vargas Zamora ,
Richard Perry ,
Evelyn Rivas ,
Phil Bickler ,
Drug Administration ,
Walgreens ,
Drew University On ,
Uc San Francisco Hypoxia Lab ,
Charlesr Drew University ,
University Of Michigan ,
Centers For Disease ,
Institute For Advancing Health Equity ,
Sutter Health ,
Hypoxia Research Laboratory ,
Charlesr Drew University Of Medicine ,
Roots Community Health Center ,
Ge Healthcare ,
East Oakland ,
Disease Control ,
Chief Executive ,
New England Journal ,
South Los Angeles ,
Los Angeles Times ,
Research Laboratory ,
Advancing Health Equity ,
American Journal ,
Monk Skin Tone ,
Monk Skin Tone Scale ,
Skin Tone ,
Root October ,
Ja May Scott ,