Naturally, the most responsible thing I can thing of is tracking all the materials we used. Sometimes Googling things is just too fucking hard.
Technical and technical-ish info:
- FCC info of our base station
- icd_study.pdf (original) (cached)- a document which mysteriously 404'd a couple of days after the hackathon (no less creepy than Barnaby's death.)
- A sample report we've found that shows what the data looks like at the doctor's office
- A "teardown" of a base station we have
- ZL70101 (transceiver used in BS&ICD) Product Preview
- Full datasheet of the ZL70101 transceiver
- ZL70101 evaluation board
- ZL70101 presentation
- St. Jude Medical paper on their new eMICS standard, with lots of relevant information
Reasoning and media coverage:
- Hacking Grandpa's ICD: Why do it?
- How to Hack Grandpa's ICD
- Patients should be allowed to access data generated by implanted devices
- My device, my body, my data (504 at the moment)
- The Shocking Truth About RF Implantable Devices
- Five Reasons Why Patients with Implantable Defibrillators Deserve Their Data
- Five Reasons Why Physicians Don’t Want Patients to Have Their Cardiac Device Data
- Why Cardiac Rhythm Device Patient Portals Will Start the Digital Health Revolution
- Muddy Waters Capital: MedSec research on SJM device security
Discussions
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