14 FEB 2023 · FOX News Radio asked Rik Heller to come on for an interview 🎙 with WHO Des Moines, Iowa to give his thoughts on how extensive the problem is in America of people developing infections after they've been admitted to the hospital.
Heller is an expert on the spread of infectious diseases and the founder of Wello, the first hands-free, self-service temperature screening device. https://www.youtube.com/redirect?event=video_description&redir_token=QUFFLUhqbm4wMk5xX09xRFlfb2NBOGdtdi1oZFViZTNxZ3xBQ3Jtc0trRjAyQmRDUG1uV3RrcVpacElaUkNyS1NBeTBPSEZSamtQd2hVa1N1V2lQa2ZwWVhDaVVyTVBSSEJyS0VaYW5oZ3E2TF9mUl9fUVFyTmU4UmtpNWQtVFQ0TWRMY09kaUo0bzFDeHlVZExBbktVbmg5Yw&q=https%3A%2F%2Fwelloinc.com%2F&v=7qpmDy7B-lI
Hospitals use Wello to make sure doctors and nurses with a fever aren't going into the operating room. He says with the 'tripledemic' straining some hospitals, orders have spiked in recent weeks. He's discovered from millions of scans, the average normal body temperature isn't 98.6°. It's actually lower. In other words, countless people are walking around with a fever and don't even know it.
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