Today’s Solutions: June 22, 2026

Pacemakers and other implantable cardiac devices used to monitor and treat heart conditions have generally posed one issue — either they are made with rigid materials that can’t move to accommodate a beating heart, or they are made from soft materials that can collect only a limited amount of information.

This, however, may soon no longer be a problem thanks to an international team of researchers that has developed a new cardiac patch from rubbery bioelectronics that can be placed directly on the heart to collect electrophysiological activity, temperature, heartbeat, and other indicators of cardiac health all at the same time.

The medical breakthrough marks the first time that fully rubbery electronic materials have been used for such technology, allowing the device to solve the limitations of previous cardiac implants, which are mainly made out of rigid electronic materials.

“For people who have a heart arrhythmia or a heart attack, you need to quickly identify the problem,” said study lead Dr. Cunjiang Yu, an Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering at the University of Houston. “This device can do that.”

What’s also remarkable about the new device is that it harvests energy from the heart’s beating, enabling it to perform without the need of an external power source. What’s more, in addition to collecting vital information, the patch is also able to offer therapeutic benefits such as electrical pacing and thermal ablation, according to the scientists.

Solutions News Source Print this article
More of Today's Solutions

A study of 100,000 people found we cooperate more than we think

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM In a standardized behavioral experiment run with more than 100,000 people across 125 countries, 69 percent of participants ...

Read More

Historic ILO vote gives gig workers labour rights for the first time

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM For the first time, gig workers have binding international labour protections. The International Labour Organization voted June 12 ...

Read More

Removable solar panels might soon be rolled out on railway tracks

Solar panels are being laid out "like carpet" across Swiss train rails as part of the country's renewable energy initiative. Swiss startup company Sun-Ways ...

Read More

Meet Susan Murabana, the astronomer bringing the cosmos to Kenyan youth

A celestial display unfolds beneath the velvety African night sky, amidst the peace of Kenya's isolated Samburu county. It’s 1:30 AM in mid-August, and ...

Read More