Many parents have experienced the angst of a crying baby with an ear infection. Some 30 million medical visits in the U.S. alone are due to pediatric ear infections each year.
A startup called CellScope has developed a device that could make such visits unnecessary. It connects to an iPhone and produces a view inside the ear magnified by a factor of 10. Users can capture and upload images to CellScope’s Web platform. After adding notes about other symptoms, parents could ask their own doctor to conduct a remote exam. In most cases, that would be enough information for a prescription to be called in, says CellScope CEO Erik Douglas.
This week, CellScope raised $1 million from Khosla Ventures to work on this smart-phone-connected version of the otoscope, the common instrument doctors use to look inside ears and diagnose infections.
CellScope, which graduated from the Rock Health health-care IT incubator last year, is an example of the recent surge of health-related devices and applications for smart phones. Already, patients can track their fitness, take their blood sugar, and even detect malaria using phones and connected devices. Juniper Research predicts there will be 142 million downloads of mobile health apps by 2016.
Mike Wisz, a health-care technology consultant, says CellScope is interesting for its potential to reduce office visits and the costs of care. The images it captures might also allow parents to more easily seek a second opinion, and could be stored in a child’s electronic health records for future reference, he says.
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