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Sherrod Woods, a Chicago native and an electrical engineer with software and biomedical engineering experience, is winning recognition for a project that would let patients with chronic illnesses send their vital signs to nurses and doctors without having to own a computer. He demonstrated his system to Christ Medical Center Emergency Room Doctor Erik Kulstad. | Rich Hein~Sun-Times
Sherrod Woods, a Chicago native and an electrical engineer with software and biomedical engineering experience, is winning recognition for a project that would let patients with chronic illnesses send their vital signs to nurses and doctors without having to own a computer. He demonstrated his system to Christ Medical Center Emergency Room Doctor Erik Kulstad. | Rich Hein~Sun-Times
Sherrod Woods, a Chicago native and an electrical engineer with software and biomedical engineering experience, is winning recognition for a project that would let patients with chronic illnesses send their vital signs to nurses and doctors without having to own a computer. | Rich Hein~Sun-Times
Sherrod Woods, a Chicago native and an electrical engineer with software and biomedical engineering experience, is winning recognition for a project that would let patients with chronic illnesses send their vital signs to nurses and doctors without having to own a computer. He held the communications module that sends the vitals from the patient's home. | Rich Hein~Sun-Times
Sherrod Woods, a Chicago native and an electrical engineer with software and biomedical engineering experience, is winning recognition for a project that would let patients with chronic illnesses send their vital signs to nurses and doctors without having to own a computer. He demonstrated his system to Christ Medical Center Emergency Room Doctor Erik Kulstad. | Rich Hein~Sun-Times
Sherrod Woods, a Chicago native and an electrical engineer with software and biomedical engineering experience, is winning recognition for a project that would let patients with chronic illnesses send their vital signs to nurses and doctors without having to own a computer. He demonstrated his system to Christ Medical Center Emergency Room Doctor Erik Kulstad by taking his own blood pressure. | Rich Hein~Sun-Times
Sherrod Woods, a Chicago native and an electrical engineer with software and biomedical engineering experience, is winning recognition for a project that would let patients with chronic illnesses send their vital signs to nurses and doctors without having to own a computer. He demonstrated his system to Christ Medical Center Emergency Room Doctor Erik Kulstad by taking his own blood pressure. | Rich Hein~Sun-Times
A Chicago State University “Entrepreneurial Idol” contest revealed a new frontier of remote medicine intended to make patient care easier and quicker than ever before. The winner of the Business School contest, Sherrod Woods, a LeClaire Courts neighborhood native and an electrical engineer with 20 …