More Ambulances Are Carrying Blood for Transfusions. Experts Say It Will Save Lives
More U.S. ambulance services are now equipped to carry and administer type O blood in the field, a practice once limited to the military. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration reports roughly 300 of the 15,000 EMS agencies have pre‑hospital blood programs, up from a few dozen a few years ago, and has earmarked $50 million to expand the capability nationwide. Clinical data suggest that early transfusion can reduce trauma‑related mortality by about 37 %, giving patients critical minutes before hospital arrival. Paramedics in Hartford, Connecticut report rapid stabilization of patients within one to two minutes of transfusion.
Gan & Lee and JW Pharmaceutical Agree on Bofanglutide Commercialisation
Gan & Lee Pharmaceuticals has signed an exclusive licence with JW Pharmaceutical to develop and commercialise the GLP‑1RA bofonaglutide in South Korea. JW will receive a $5 million upfront payment and up to $76.1 million in milestones, bringing total potential value to...
FDA Approves Higher Dose Nusinersen for Spinal Muscular Atrophy
The FDA has approved a higher‑dose regimen of nusinersen (Spinraza) for spinal muscular atrophy, updating both the loading and maintenance phases. The new schedule delivers two larger injections two weeks apart, followed by maintenance doses every four months. Approval follows...
Addressing Pain Points in Organoid Sorting: The Orgadroid
Visienco, a Swiss life‑sciences startup, unveiled the Orgadroid—an automated platform that combines precision robotics with AI‑driven microscopy to sort and classify organoids. The organoid market is forecast to reach $15.01 billion by 2031, growing at a 22.43% CAGR, but manual handling...

Telix Reports US FDA Acceptance of NDA for TLX101-Px (Pixclara) in Glioma Imaging
Telix Pharma announced that the U.S. FDA has accepted the resubmitted New Drug Application for TLX101‑Px, marketed as Pixclara, an investigational 18F‑FET PET imaging agent for glioma detection in adults and children. The agency set a PDUFA action date of...

Amgen’s Lung Cancer Drug Tarlatamab Wins China Approval
Amgen’s bispecific antibody tarlatamab, marketed in the U.S. as Imdelltra, has received approval from China’s National Medical Products Administration. The drug is designed for adults with extensive‑stage small cell lung cancer that has progressed despite chemotherapy. Amgen will commercialize the...
South Korea to Fund Medical AI Device Rollout and More Briefs
South Korea's Ministry of Health and Welfare will allocate 8 billion won ($5.3 million) from the AX‑Sprint programme to fund commercialization of AI‑based medical devices, supporting consortia with hospitals for clinical validation and reimbursement between 2026‑27. Singapore's Nanyang Technological University launched the...
Pulse Biosciences Hires Liane Teplitsky as COO
Pulse Biosciences appointed former Abbott executive Liane Teplitsky as chief operating officer to accelerate its pulsed‑field ablation (PFA) strategy. The company is focusing R&D on the nPulse Cardiac Catheter, a percutaneous device for atrial fibrillation, after promising first‑in‑human data from 150...

Multi-Agent AI Delivers Reliable and Scalable Insights for Single-Cell Omics
Nygen Analytics, a Lund‑based startup founded by computational genomics expert Parashar Dhapola, is deploying multi‑agent AI to streamline single‑cell omics analysis. The platform automates cell‑type annotation, handling millions of cells while reducing error rates that can misguide drug discovery. By...

Kymera Therapeutics Reports Gilead’s Option Exercise to License KT-200, a CDK2 Molecular Glue Degrader
Gilead Sciences exercised its option to exclusively license KT‑200, a first‑in‑class oral CDK2 molecular‑glue degrader, from Kymera Therapeutics. The transaction triggers a $45 million milestone payment, with Kymera eligible for up to $750 million in additional milestones and tiered royalties. Gilead will...
This Week in European MedTech and HealthTech: 10th April 2026
The European Commission released new guidance linking the AI Act to the MDR/IVDR, demanding higher data quality, risk management and human oversight for high‑risk AI medical software. The EU Health Technology Assessment framework is now fully operational, raising the evidence...
Iron‐Based Metal‐Organic Framework MIL‐100(Fe) Regulates Keloid Scarring in a Humanized Keloid Model
The study shows iron‑based metal‑organic framework MIL‑100(Fe) nanoparticles are highly biocompatible, rapidly taken up by keloid fibroblasts, and selectively inhibit the TGF‑β/SMAD pathway, reducing collagen I, collagen III, and P4HA1 expression. In vitro experiments maintained >90% cell viability and curtailed...
The Latino Health Experience: Past and Future
A new PNAS review by Goldman and Pebley examines the Latino health paradox, highlighting the group’s historically higher life expectancy alongside persistent chronic disease, disability, and occupational risks. The authors document how COVID‑19 sharply reduced Latino survival, exposing socioeconomic and...

EBSCO Clinical Decisions Report: 80% of Clinicians Trust Evidence-Based AI Tools
EBSCO Clinical Decisions released a report showing a stark trust gap in AI‑driven clinical decision support. While 89% of clinicians believe AI‑CDS will improve outcomes, 64% of patients would rather see a doctor who does not use AI. Evidence‑based AI...

Radiologists Countersue Former Colleague over Delayed $2M Payout in Sale to Private Equity
Southtowns Radiology Associates and eight physicians filed a countersuit against former partner Gregory R. Ball, alleging he is withholding a $2 million payout tied to the practice’s 2023 sale of its imaging centers to private‑equity firm Rezolut. Ball previously claimed the...
[Perspectives] Mammography Should Include Artificial Intelligence Support
The Mammography Screening with Artificial Intelligence (MASAI) randomised trial showed that a single radiologist assisted by an AI algorithm achieved higher sensitivity than the traditional double‑reading approach, while preserving specificity. Complementary studies from 2025‑2026 confirm AI’s scalability and equitable performance...
[Correspondence] Contemporary Non-Invasive Imaging for Coronary Artery Disease
The correspondence highlights three critical clarifications to a recent review on non‑invasive cardiac imaging. First, it stresses that patients with non‑obstructive coronary arteries can still experience angina and ischemia due to microvascular dysfunction or vasospasm. Second, it reinterprets the role...
[Comment] Liver Disease: Screening for the Elusive Adversary
The Lancet commentary revisits the classic Wilson‑Jungner criteria to evaluate whether population‑wide liver disease screening is justified. It highlights the disease’s long asymptomatic phase and dismal outcomes for late presenters, but points out the lack of consensus on diagnostic thresholds...
[Editorial] The Future of Preconception Health
The Lancet’s latest editorial revisits preconception health, highlighting that eight years after its 2018 series, research and policy still lag behind the broadened concept that includes both men and women. New reviews argue that men’s physical and mental health before...

Dermatologists Show Highest Melanoma Diagnostic Performance with AI Support
A systematic review of 11 prospective studies involving over 2,500 patients found that AI algorithms detect melanoma with sensitivity (80.9%) and specificity (75.6%) comparable to dermatologists (78.6% and 75.2%). When dermatologists used AI assistance, performance jumped to 91.9% sensitivity and...
Weill Cornell Medicine Plans $57M New Radiology Center in Brooklyn
Weill Cornell Medicine has filed state approvals to build a $57 million radiology clinic in Brooklyn’s Bay Ridge neighborhood. The outpatient center, located inside the NewYork‑Presbyterian Bay Ridge Primary Multispecialty center, will feature three MRI machines, a CT scanner, ultrasound and...

Radiology Departments Can Cut Costs and Save the Planet by Limiting Ultrasound Waste
A new study in the Journal of the American College of Radiology shows that ultrasound imaging generates significant carbon emissions, with linens and disposable supplies accounting for roughly 35% and 34% of its greenhouse‑gas footprint respectively. The research, conducted at...

Medicine Supply Stable, Stocks Sufficient Until End-June, Says Dzulkefly
Malaysia’s Health Ministry says the nation’s medicine supply will remain stable through the end of June despite the ongoing Middle East conflict. Minister Datuk Seri Dr Dzulkefly Ahmad highlighted mitigation measures, data sharing between public and private sectors, and continuous industry...
IBM Win NHS App Deal
NHS England awarded IBM a two‑year contract worth £160.1 million (about $203 million) to advance the NHS App. The deal, running from May 1 2026 to March 31 2028, focuses on expanding features, AI‑driven triage, and user‑centred pathways. It marks a shift from IBM’s previous operational...

Healthcare Stock Park Medi World Jumps 6% After This Expansion Update
Park Medi World’s shares jumped nearly 6% after the company announced the opening of a multi‑super specialty hospital in Panchkula on April 10, 2026. The new facility adds roughly 850 beds to the Tricity region, expanding the group’s footprint across Haryana,...
New EPR Goes Live in Torbay and South Devon
The Epic electronic patient record (EPR) system has gone live across Torbay and South Devon NHS Foundation Trust, linking hospital and community sites. The rollout initially connects Royal Devon University Healthcare and Torbay and South Devon Trust, with University Hospitals...
This Alzheimer's Risk Gene Rewires Your Brain Long Before Symptoms – and One Surprising Habit Could Blunt Its Impact
Scientists have identified that the APOE4 allele, which raises Alzheimer’s risk three‑ to four‑fold per copy, rewires hippocampal memory circuits in mice decades before any cognitive symptoms appear. Young APOE4 mice exhibit smaller, hyper‑excitable neurons, a pattern not seen in...
9 Reasons To Consider Becoming an Organ Donor
The article outlines nine compelling reasons to become an organ donor, highlighting a record 49,000 donors in 2025 against a waiting list of over 103,000 patients. It cites Cleveland Clinic’s 1,424 transplants in the same year and emphasizes that a...
Want To Be an Organ Donor? Here’s How To Register
The article outlines how anyone 18 or older can register as an organ donor in the United States, highlighting that a single donor can save over 80 lives by providing up to eight organs and 75 tissue transplants. It lists...
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Best Long-Term Care Insurance Options for Comprehensive Coverage
Investopedia ranks Northwestern Mutual as the best overall long‑term care insurance provider, citing its $12,000 monthly benefit, strong financial ratings and low complaint levels. Runner‑up Thrivent offers the highest $15,000 benefit but limits eligibility to Christian applicants. Mutual of Omaha...
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Best Fertility Insurance Options for 2026: Compare Top Providers
Investopedia’s 2026 review ranks Aetna, Ambetter and UnitedHealthcare as the top ACA marketplace providers for fertility coverage. Ambetter earns the low‑cost badge with a $441 average monthly premium but sees higher customer complaints. UnitedHealthcare wins for network breadth, offering access...

Pacific Edge Test Volumes Rise 2.7% in Q4 on Payer Expansion
Pacific Edge reported a 2.7% sequential rise in Q4 FY26 test volumes to 5,582, propelled by new commercial payer coverage. U.S. volumes grew 1.0% while Asia‑Pacific surged 7.7%, and tests per sales FTE jumped to 530 despite a reduced sales...

CMS Launched First Wave of Its Health Technology Ecosystem
On April 9, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) launched the first wave of its Health Technology Ecosystem, showcasing interoperable digital tools from more than 50 companies. The rollout introduces a "Kill the Clipboard" initiative, digital Medicare cards, and...

In a First, a Drugmaker’s Lawsuit Challenges HRSA’s 340B Patient Definition
AbbVie Inc. has filed a lawsuit in Washington, D.C. challenging the Health Resources and Services Administration’s (HRSA) 30‑year‑old guidance on who qualifies as a “patient” under the 340B drug pricing program. The drugmaker argues the guidance is overly broad, allowing...
Provider Shortages, Payment Gaps Drive Pediatric Access Inequities: Chris Johnson
Chris Johnson, CEO of Bluebird Kids Health, told AJMC that Medicaid and CHIP children face stark access gaps. He said nearly half of U.S. kids rely on these programs, but lower Medicaid reimbursement and provider location bias create a two‑tier...

RFK Jr. Rewrites CDC Panel's Charter, Opening Door to Anti-Vaccine Quacks
U.S. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has overhauled the CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) charter, expanding who can serve and adding anti‑vaccine groups as non‑voting liaisons. The revised charter mandates review of cumulative vaccine effects, mRNA safety, and international schedules,...
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PUBLIC HEALTHCARE: Bureaucratic Cardiac Arrest — Why Heart Attacks Became Deadlier in Nelson Mandela Bay
From April 1‑9, Livingstone Hospital in Nelson Mandela Bay had no adult cardiologists on duty after their contracts expired, leaving a multimillion‑rand catheterisation laboratory idle. The Eastern Cape Department of Health failed to renew the contracts, forcing cardiac patients to be...
Psychedelic Retreats Linked to Mental Health Improvements in People with Severe Childhood Trauma
An observational study of 570 participants at psychedelic retreats in the Netherlands and the Caribbean found that individuals with higher numbers of adverse childhood experiences showed greater reductions in anxiety and larger gains in overall well‑being after the ceremonies. The...
Influenza Frequently Missed in Winter Deaths, New Study Finds
A population‑based study of 857 Spanish deaths across four flu seasons found influenza in 11% of winter fatalities, yet only 17% were diagnosed before death and merely 1.4% appeared on death certificates. Post‑mortem PCR testing revealed that many infections, especially...
Healthcare Remains Top Cybercrime Target: FBI
The FBI’s 2025 Internet Crime Report shows healthcare and public health faced the most cyber incidents of any critical‑infrastructure sector, with 642 events recorded. Ransomware dominated, accounting for 460 attacks, while 182 data breaches placed the industry third in breach...

Which Health Plans Rank Highest In Digital Experience?
The JD Power U.S. Healthcare Digital Experience study evaluated 7,687 members across the 17 largest Medicare Advantage and 16 largest commercial health plans. Cigna Healthcare topped the commercial segment with a 684‑point score, while UPMC Health Plan led Medicare Advantage...
AI Model Suggests CPAP Can Massively Swing Heart Risk in Sleep Apnea
Mount Sinai researchers developed a machine‑learning model that predicts how continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) therapy will affect cardiovascular risk in patients with obstructive sleep apnea. Using data from the SAVE trial and more than 100 baseline variables, the algorithm...
There Are No Good Ways to Avoid Childhood Eczema but Many Treatment Options, Say Researchers
The American Academy of Dermatology released its first pediatric eczema guidelines, concluding that prevention strategies such as special diets, probiotics, or altered bathing have no proven benefit. Moisturizers earned a conditional recommendation for reducing incidence in children aged six months...
CPR Goes High-Tech: Transesophageal Echocardiography Turns Blind Compressions Into Precision Hits
Researchers conducted the first randomized clinical trial testing transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) to guide cardiopulmonary resuscitation. While overall survival rates were similar to standard care, TEE‑guided compressions produced significantly higher end‑tidal CO2, a proxy for blood flow quality. The study, published...
Rochester General Technical Workers Vote to Unionize
Technical workers at Rochester General Hospital voted 145-54 to join the Rochester Union of Nurses and Allied Professionals, covering nearly 300 roles such as respiratory therapists, radiology technologists, and licensed practical nurses. The new bargaining unit aims to leverage collective...

Webinar to Share Strategies on Workforce Relief
The American Hospital Association (AHA) is urging health leaders to register for its 2026 Annual Membership Meeting in Washington, D.C., which includes a webinar on workforce‑relief strategies. Recent data reveal flu vaccination at 76.3% and COVID‑19 vaccination at 40.2% among...
FDA Denies Exemption Request for Radiology AI Devices
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration denied a petition seeking partial exemption of radiology artificial‑intelligence devices from 510(k) premarket review. The request, filed in October 2025, aimed to waive requirements for computer‑aided detection, diagnosis, triage and notification software. After reviewing...

AI Grief Bots Present ‘New Complexities’ in Bereavement Care
Artificial intelligence is entering bereavement care through "grief bots" that recreate a deceased loved one’s voice, likeness, and mannerisms from audio, video, texts and social‑media data. Companies such as Hereafter.ai, You, Only Virtual, StoryFile and Uare.ai are already offering interactive...
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Best Medicare Plan G Providers of 2026
Investopedia evaluated nine Medigap insurers to rank the best providers of Medicare Plan G for 2026. UnitedHealthcare’s AARP‑branded Plan G earned the top spot with a $268 monthly premium, nationwide availability, and strong financial ratings. Anthem delivered the lowest average Plan G premium...
Florida International U, Medical School Land $30M Gift for Medical Center
Philanthropists Helen and Jacob Shaham have pledged a $30 million gift to Florida International University’s Herbert Wertheim College of Medicine. The donation will underwrite the construction of a new seven‑story academic medical center on FIU’s Miami campus, to be named the...