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HP Skin Patch May Replace Needles

Iddo Genuth writes "HP and Crospon have developed a skin patch employing microneedles that barely penetrate the skin. The microneedles can replace conventional injections and deliver drugs through the skin without causing any pain. The skin patch technology also enables delivery of several drugs by one patch and the control of dosage and of administration time for each drug. It has the potential to be safer and more efficient than injections."

4 of 190 comments (clear)

  1. Previously on Slashdot by Dr.+Eggman · · Score: 3, Informative

    Last we heard this was in the prototype phase. Btw, the search function is terrible.

    --
    Demented But Determined.
  2. Re:Niccotine patch did it already? by Thanshin · · Score: 4, Informative

    Those work through the skin. Transdermal patch

    This ones enter through micro needles.

  3. Re:Did someone say hypospray? by selex · · Score: 3, Informative

    Jet Injector. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jet_injector Already exist. From what I heard from military people who had it used on them it f**king hurts.

    Now the question is HP? Really? The people who built my printer? And laptop? I guess that development of the inkjet has other applications.

    Selex

    Really?

  4. Re:Now we need sensors in those patches by Ihlosi · · Score: 4, Informative
    If this technology triumphs, the next addition should be sensors that control the release of chemicals taking the current situation into consideration.



    No company wants to open that bag of liability issues. If your device makes medical decisions (instead of leaving them to a physician), you make yourself a big fat blinking glowing target for all sorts of legal trouble. Current example: Infusion pumps. While studies show that feedback-controlled infusion pumps lead to better patient outcomes, no company wants to make them because they don't want to get slapped with a multi-million-dollar lawsuit for the one patient in a thousand who thinks he might have had a better outcome with a standard infusion pump.