Here's an example of what's due today

Ethics of monitoring

Wed, Oct 14, 2026 · Week 8 · Principles of Biomedical Technology (Principles of Biomedical Science)

Today's goal: Debate whether wearables and continuous monitoring help or harm patients, and defend your view.

Learn first

What a finished product looks like

This is a model of the work you should turn in today. Use it to check your own: match the structure and the level of detail, do not copy it. Your data and wording should be your own.

Worked CER on a parallel case
Completes: A short written argument taking a side on whether a home blood glucose monitor that automatically shares readings with a care team helps or harms patients, with the reasoning grounded in informed consent and data privacy.

Claim: A home blood glucose monitor that automatically uploads readings to a patient's care team helps patients more than it harms them, but only when the patient gives informed consent to that data sharing.\n\nEvidence: Automatic uploading lets a nurse or doctor spot dangerous highs and lows between visits and adjust insulin sooner, which can prevent emergencies for people with diabetes. The same feature also sends a stream of personal health data outside the home, where it could be seen by more people than the patient expects or used in ways the patient never agreed to.\n\nReasoning: The deciding factor is informed consent, which means the patient understands what data is collected, who can see it, and how it will be used before agreeing to share it. If the patient knows those terms and still chooses to share, the benefit of faster medical response outweighs the loss of some privacy. A limitation is that uploaded readings are only numbers without context, so a sudden low value could reflect a device error rather than a real emergency. Because of this, the care team should confirm an unusual reading with the patient before changing treatment.

Also due today: Post the CER to the discussion board or hand in the written copy before leaving.

Check yourself

WebXam problem for today's skill

One exam-style question that uses exactly what you practiced today. Try it before you reveal the answer, then read why each choice is right or wrong.

WebXam-style domain: Biotechnology Research and ExperimentsSelf-check skill: Defining patient autonomy and the data limits of wearables
A patient declines to wear a continuous glucose monitor even though their doctor recommends it. Which principle most directly supports the patient's right to refuse?

Tap an answer to see the full explanation. Nothing is recorded or graded.