Ora, Inc. launches Ora EyecupTM at Eyecelerator 2022
Ora, Inc. the ophthalmology clinical research firm, has formally launched a revolutionary mobile research platform, Ora EyeCupTM, which promises to transform patient data capture through highresolution imaging, artificial intelligence (AI) analysis, and real-time patient feedback. The Ora EyeCupTM, a finalist in the Most Valuable Clinical Technology Award category at the Reuters Events Pharma Awards USA 2022, will be presented by Dr Gustavo De Moraes, Chief Medical Officer at Ora, at this year’s Eyecelerator Conference
in Chicago, IL, September 29th.
The Ora EyeCupTM platform is a powerful combination of hardware and software – a smartphone attachment and software application which allows patients to take high-resolution images of their eyes and track disease signs and symptoms remotely. With over 138,000 images captured to date, 98% are considered gradable by researchers and AI. Post-capture processing utilizes AI-powered image analysis for precise clinical assessments of ocular redness, tear film stability, and corneal health.
Along with this, the Ora EyeCupTM ensures protocol adherence through compliance assurance diaries for both symptom tracking and therapy dosing.
“At Ora, our technologists have spent the past two years developing this revolutionary system to capture patient data and provide a deeper understanding of therapeutic effect,” notes Dr. De Moraes. “The result is a trailblazing technology that captures high quality therapeutic data and improves the likelihood of study success.” (AP)
“Nashville,” “Madam Secretary,” “Masters of Sex” and “NCIS.”
Boyd, who fled after crashing into Banes, was arrested weeks later. He pleaded guilty on Wednesday to second-degree manslaughter and leaving the scene of an incident without reporting,
The sentence promised to Boyd was less than the three to nine years that prosecutors from the Manhattan district attorney’s office had sought. (AP)
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NEW YORK: A federal judge signaled Wednesday that she plans to order disgraced R&B superstar R.
to pay more than $300,000 to one his victims in a decadeslong scheme to use his fame to sexually abuse young fans.
A restitution order by US District Judge Ann Connelly that was still being finalized is meant to cover the cost of treatment for herpes and psychotherapy. The victim, referred to only by a pseudonym, has accused the jailed Kelly of giving her the sexually transmitted disease during