Medima - P300

A. Hartley, PhD; S. Chen, MD; L. M. Rodriguez, PhD; K. I. Tanaka, MD (Affiliation: Institute for Integrated Medical Devices, University of Global Health)

Point-of-care diagnostics, artificial intelligence in medicine, closed-loop therapy, sepsis detection, Raman spectroscopy, microfluidics. 1. Introduction The "golden hour" of emergency medicine—the critical 60 minutes following traumatic injury or acute illness—demands interventions that are both rapid and precise. Yet, current workflows remain fragmented: blood draws are sent to central labs (turnaround 45–120 min), imaging requires bulky equipment, and infusions are manually titrated by overburdened staff. In low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), the situation is more acute, with a severe shortage of laboratory infrastructure and specialists. medima p300

PATIENT: ID-7890, F/72 TIME: 2026-04-17 10:34:22 UTC VITALS: HR 118 bpm (SVT), BP 88/52, RR 24, SpO2 93%, Temp 38.9°C BLOOD PANEL: Na 132 ↓, K 4.1, Glu 145 ↑, Lac 3.2 ↑, CRP 145 mg/L ↑, PCT 8.2 ng/mL ↑ WBC 18.5 ↑, Plt 98 ↓ SERS: LPS detected (E. coli, 95% confidence) imaging requires bulky equipment

Dr. Hartley is a paid consultant to Medima Health, Inc. Other authors declare no competing interests. the situation is more acute

This work was funded by the Global Health Innovation Fund (Grant GH-2024-089). The authors thank the ED staff of University Hospital North and the rural health posts of Kilifi County, Kenya.