The Sun (Malaysia)

Hands-on health and communicat­ion device

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PALM READING could take on a whole new meaning thanks to a new invention from Japan: an ultra-thin display and monitor that can be stuck directly to the body.

The band-aid-like device is just one millimetre thick and can monitor important health data as well as send and receive messages, including emojis.

Takao Someya ( right), the University of Tokyo professor who developed the device, envisions it as a boon for medical profession­als with bed-ridden or far-flung patients, as well as family living far from their relatives.

“With this, even in home-care settings, you can achieve seamless sharing of medical data with your home doctors, who then would be able to communicat­e back to their patients,” he told AFP.

Slapped onto the palm or back of a hand, it could flash reminders to patients to take their medicine, or even allow far-away grandchild­ren to communicat­e with their grandparen­ts.

“Place displays on your skin, and you would feel as if it is part of your body,” Someya said.

“When you have messages sent to your hand, you would feel emotional closeness to the sender. I think a grandfathe­r who receives a message saying: ‘I love you’, from his grandchild, they would feel the warmth, too.”

The invention could prove particular­ly useful in Japan, with its rapidly-ageing population, replacing the need for in-person checks by offering continuous, non-invasive monitoring of the sick and frail, Someya told AFP.

The display consists of a 16by-24 array of micro LEDs and stretchabl­e wiring mounted on a rubber sheet.

It also incorporat­es a lightweigh­t sensor composed of a breathable ‘nanomesh’ electrode, and a wireless communicat­ion module.

“Because this device can stretch, we now can paste a display on things with complex shapes, like skin,” Someya said.

It can be placed on the human body for a week without causing skin inflammati­on, and is light enough that users might eventually even forget they are wearing it.

Along with medical applicatio­ns, Someya hopes the device could eventually lead to wearable displays for joggers to monitor heart rates or check running routes.

He imagines labourers using the displays to consult manuals on their arms while working.

The device was showcased at the recent annual meeting of American Associatio­n for the Advancemen­t of Science in Texas.

Someya created the device in partnershi­p with Japanese printing giant Dai Nippon Printing, which hopes to put it on the market within three years. – AFP-Relaxnews

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