(6 Jan 2023) US CES SELFIE DIAGNOSIS
SOURCE: ASSOCIATED PRESS
RESTRICTION SUMMARY:
LENGTH: 2.38
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Las Vegas, Nevada - 5 January 2023
1. Various of exhibitor demonstrating Caducy selfie diagnosis app
2. Close of smartphone, showing results
3. Mid of banner
4. Close of banner, reading (English ): "Caducy"
5. SOUNDBITE (English) Gael Constancin, I-Virtual:
"What we want is to enable the patient to do remote patient monitoring easily. So what we do, we develop some solution medical device to improve the experience of patient in the telehealth platform."
6. Various of exhibitor demonstrating Caducy selfie diagnosis app
7. Tilt down of smartphone, showing results
8. SOUNDBITE (English) Gael Constancin, I-Virtual:
"So what we are looking, we are looking the skin of the face. And with what we see, we see the blood moving through the skin. So, it's signal analysis. We measure the purest wave from by signal analysis directly on the face of the person and the respiratory rate, we just look at the chest and we count, we count the movement."
9. Various of attendee trying out Caducy selfie diagnosis app
10. Pull focus of picture on banner
11. SOUNDBITE (English) Gael Constancin, I-Virtual:
"Teleconsultation, very easy use case for us. Just before, you measure your vitals with our solution, and the doctor can get these vital signs just before the consultation. And can go further to the diagnosis with that."
12. Close of smartphone, showing results
13. Wide of I-Virtual CES booth
LEADIN:
At CES gadget show in Las Vegas, French startup I-Virtual is showcasing its diagnosis technology that's able to monitor vital signs just through a 30-second selfie video.
The developers say it will improve remote medical consultations, by allowing doctors to see data like heart and respiratory rate ahead of a consultation.
STORYLINE:
Caducy - as it's known - measures health data.
The video stream is analysed in the cloud with rppg, AI and deep learning algorithms, including computer vision and signal processing.
After a quick analysis, the app gives info including heart rate, respiratory rate and stress level.
"So what we are looking, we are looking the skin of the face," explains Gael Constancin from I-Virtual.
"And with what we see, we see the blood moving through the skin. So, it's signal analysis. We measure the purest wave from by signal analysis directly on the face of the person and the respiratory rate, we just look at the chest and we count, we count the movement."
The company believes its technology can empower remote consultations, giving doctors useful information before they even begin the conversation.
"Teleconsultation, very easy use case for us. Just before, you measure your vitals with our solution, and the doctor can get these vital signs just before the consultation. And can go further to the diagnosis with that," says Constancin.
CES 2023 (formerly the Consumer Electronics Show) opened in Las Vegas, Nevada on January 5th, around 100,000 attendees are expected.
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