By MIKE MAGEE
On March 9, 1967, the Star Trek traditional episode, “The Devil in the Dark” first aired. The Enterprise had acquired an pressing misery name from miners on the planet Janus VI. They’re actually melting after, Horta, a wounded inhabitant has focused them with liquifying acid rays.
A sympathetic Spock hears the decision, and in an effort to reveal trigger and motivation, “mind-melts” with the creature. Seems, all she’s attempting to do is defend her infants from a perceived risk. Kirk agrees, and with Spock, calls in Dr. McCoy to entry the affected person’s situation.
What McCoy encounters is a “rocky-skinned affected person.” With the help of his tricoder, a handheld diagnostic sensor, “Bones” (McCoy’s nickname referencing the historic nineteenth century American slang “Sawbones” referring to surgeons) uncovers a severe and deep gaping wound that requires speedy consideration.
Kirk manages to “beam down” 100 kilos of thermoconcrete, and McCoy expertly applies it to the wound. All of which is a set-up for his shipmates to marvel if this can work, which generates the long-lasting most-repeated line within the sequence storied historical past. McCoy (clearly irritated) utters – “How do I do know? I’m a physician, not a bricklayer.”
Equally challenged modern-day docs have been voicing their very own frustrations for quite a lot of a long time. However the AMA has been scientifically monitoring their discontent solely since 2011. The degrees of burnout are considerably down in 2025 in comparison with peaked pique in 2021. However among the many irritants, integration of latest know-how stay close to the highest of the checklist.
No person knew higher than McCoy the blended blessing of know-how. His authentic “twenty third century tricoder” was a marvel of diagnostic science but additionally raised moral dilemmas and affected person expectations. The fictional device initially was the dimensions of a transportable tape recorder and served as a normal information sensor and analyzer. The medical model was a “hand-held excessive decision scanner” which (within the twenty fourth century model) had a flip out panel with expanded display, mentioned to have been impressed by the HP-41C scientific calculator.”
On Could 10, 2011, Qualcomm partnered with entrepreneurs to create the Ticorder X Prize, a $10 million incentive for anybody who might actualize the Star Trek fictional mannequin’s capabilities in a hand-held medical tricoder. 5 years later, the competition was formally closed out, with $3.7 million awarded to a number of contestants, none of whom efficiently reproduced all of the capabilities.
This isn’t to say that dreamers within the Star Trek mode ever gave up on being successors to McCoy. In 2013, 15-year-old Aspen Palatnick took a summer season internship at Lengthy Island’s historic Chilly Spring Harbor Laboratory to be taught the fundamentals of genome evaluation. Seven years later, after teaming up along with his authentic professor, Michael Schatz, they developed “the world’s first cell genome sequence analyzer” as an iPhone app termed iGenomics.
Cold Spring Harbor trumpeted their success on December 7, 2020, stating “The iPhone app was developed to enrich the tiny DNA sequencing gadgets being made by Oxford Nanopore. Palatnick, now a software program engineer at Fb, was already skilled at constructing iPhone apps when becoming a member of the Schatz laboratory. He and Schatz realized that because the sequencers continued to get even smaller, there have been no applied sciences obtainable to allow you to examine that DNA on a cell machine. “Many of the finding out of DNA: aligning, analyzing, is finished on giant server clusters or high-end laptops…flying in suitcases filled with Nanopores and laptops and different servers to try this evaluation within the distant fields (was impractical). iGenomics helps by making genome research extra moveable, accessible, and reasonably priced.”
“Moveable, accessible, and reasonably priced!” That’s one thing Bones McCoy might get behind. Actually, he’d be amazed to see what he has spawned in 2025, and the way new know-how is augmenting slightly than complicating the work of physicians, nurses and medical scientists.
Think about, for instance the publication that dropped on June 3, 2025 in Nature. Within the reporting in Science journal, you may really feel the joy: “Throughout a single week in April 2023, the world round Florida’s Washington Oaks Gardens State Park was abuzz. A bobcat handed by, maybe stalking the japanese grey squirrels. An japanese diamondback rattlesnake slithered via the undergrowth. The areas among the many grand oaks hummed with wildlife—a giant brown bat, mosquitoes, and an osprey—and folks with African, European, and Asian ancestors… Scientists didn’t instantly see any of those creatures. However they used cutting-edge DNA know-how to seek out proof of them in tiny specks of natural materials floating within the air. An analogous evaluation of air from the streets of Dublin revealed a far completely different, however equally wealthy, tableau of life.”
The brand new method, “shotgun sequencing” can learn, analyze, and reconstruct giant DNA sequences from billions of brief sequences. However what’s actually startling is the usability of the machine within the discipline. As reported, “No less than one newer machine is smaller than a cigarette packet and might plug right into a laptop computer, in contrast with earlier machines the dimensions of a small family fridge.”
David Duffy, a biologist on the College of Florida’s Whitney Laboratory for Marine Bioscience and senior writer of the brand new examine, initially needed to title the article, “Towards a tricorder,” however was dissuaded stating, “We’re not claiming to be there,” Duffy says. “We’re saying we’re so much nearer to this being a factual actuality than we have been a number of years in the past. And you’ll foresee it being a actuality sooner or later.”
Mike Magee MD is a Medical Historian and common contributor to THCB. He’s the writer of CODE BLUE: Inside America’s Medical Industrial Complicated. (Grove/2020)