Wellness as a Service
Wellness as a service (WaaS) is fitness and wellness on your phone, on-demand. The popularity and options just grew during the pandemic.
Wellness as a service (WaaS) is fitness and wellness on your phone, on-demand. The popularity and options just grew during the pandemic.
What medicine has learned and is learning from other industries? How can generalists in sports be more successful than specialists?
It’s been an interesting week in medicine and personally, which was also why I’m surprised I could write the whole thing in just a day.
Tesla is considered a tech product, but this issue also makes the case for being a medical device. Exercise, on the other hand, is mitochondrial medicine.
Not your usual Sunday MashUp. It was sent on a Monday and it doesn't contain all the usual resources. Instead it includes previous issues.
With the exams in full swing, I once again opted in for a little shorter version. This time it's about exercise data and medical startups.
What happens when we stop exercising? How the WHO discredited themselves? And how to reconstruct the blood-brain barrier?
Science behind Polar, insulin during exercise, stem cells for tissue repair, emissions after the pandemic and failure in healthcare.
LeBron James, deciding why not to be a surgeon, AI interpreting X-rays, Google’s masterplan and a couple of articles on why mindfulness might work.
HIV prevention yields results, circadian rhythm is distracted by savings time, lactate zones are the new standard in sports, range and some biohacking.