National study evaluates the electricity cost burden of in-home medical equipment

In the United States, the market for durable medical equipment (DME)—including oxygen concentrators, continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) machines and peritoneal kidney dialysis machines—has a projected market increase from $43.3 billion in 2022 to $64.8 billion in 2027. Operating this equipment can add significantly to household energy bills. Those who rely on this equipment tend to be energy insecure.

Chaos Erupts after Black Woman Asked to Dim phone in Movie Theater
- Google versus OpenAI: Unraveling the Intricacies of AI Giants - Michael Terry
- Google's AR Team Loses another Executive as it Seeks Partner for Glasses Project - Michael A. Medeiros
- Culver's Scoops of Thanks Day offers $1 custards to benefit charity
- Framework Laptop 13 (2025) with AMD Ryzen AI 300 review: The usual iterative upgrade - Daniel Cooper
- Matter update may finally take the tedium out of setting up your smart home - Ryan Whitwam
- CEO Andrew Wilson says EA ‘reignited’ momentum for EA Sports FC in fiscal Q4 - Dean Takahashi

Tech in Europe That Just Make Sense!
- A culturally adapted obesity prevention can better serve Latino families
- The Battlestar Galactica Episode That Nearly Scared Female Fans Away - Chris Snellgrove
- Some American Companies May Be Trying To Sidestep Trump’s DEI Crackdown, Scholars Warn - Ireland Owens
- Google I/O 2025: What to expect over the next two weeks on Android 16, Android XR and Gemini - Igor Bonifacic
- How To Become A Grant Writer With No Experience - Aamir Zahoor
- Hearing loss in middle age may accelerate cognitive decline