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Liquid medicine being poured from MyCare device

Medasyst dysphagia solution: Medasyst is making Medicine Easy to Swallow

Medasyst dysphagia solution: Medasyst’s Ultrasonic Tech Makes Medicine Easy to Swallow

Introduction: A Hidden Struggle Impacting 1 Million Australians
You might be surprised to learn that over 1 million Australians suffer from dysphagia, difficulty swallowing food or medicine, a condition many aren’t even aware of, enter the Medasyst dysphagia solution  speechpathologyaustralia.org.au+1University of Technology Sydney+1. With ageing population trends, the total addressable market in Australia is estimated at near 2.6 million people regularly taking medications and potentially affected. This silent health issue disproportionately affects people aged 55 and over, and its consequences extend far beyond discomfort.

Dysphagia in Australia: How Medasyst’s Ultrasonic Tech Makes Medicine Easy to Swallow

Understanding Dysphagia: More Than a Throat Problem
Dysphagia is no minor inconvenience—it can lead to choking, aspiration pneumonia, malnutrition, dehydration, and even hospitalisation BioMed Central+5Ausmed+5NDIS Quality and Safeguards Commission+5. Studies show that among Australians aged 65+, up to 30 % living in the community and over 50 % in aged‑care facilities experience swallowing difficulties The Guardian+9scgh.health.wa.gov.au+9Ausmed+9. Many sufferers go untreated due to embarrassment or lack of awareness.

Why Medication Becomes a Daily Battle
For many seniors, pill-taking is no longer routine, it’s stressful. Large tablets, unpalatable coatings, or dry mouth can make swallowing painful. Carers often crush tablets or mix them in food, but this can lead to inaccurate doses and reduced effectiveness. The psychological impact can be profound: fear of choking, embarrassment, and reluctance to take life‑saving medications. Thats why we invented the Medasyst dysphagia solution.

Enter Medasyst: Ultrasonic Liquid Relief
Medasyst offers a powerful solution: an ultrasonic MyCare unit that liquifies solid medications into safe, precisely measured liquids. Using ultrasonic energy, this system gently disintegrates tablets without heat, preserving drug effectiveness. The result? Easy to swallow, accurately dosed liquid medication, even for large or coated pills.

Medasyst dysphagia solution

How Ultrasonic Liquification Works

  • A tablet is placed in a sterile chamber.

  • Ultrasonic pulses gently break it down into micro‑particles.

  • The resulting suspension is mixed with a chilled flavoured mixer.

  • A calibrated dose is dispensed in under a minute.

This process eliminates manual crushing, ensures dosing accuracy, and removes choking hazards—even for high‑risk medicines. Because Medasyst is temperature‑neutral, it avoids chemical degradation or thermal stress.

Benefits for Health‑Conscious Australians and Carers

  • Accuracy and safety: avoids under- or overdosing

  • Ease and independence: ideal for seniors, aged care, clinics, or home use

  • Enhanced compliance: no more skipping or refusing pills

  • Comfort and dignity: medication becomes a palatable part of daily routine

Scientific and Community Relevance
Speech pathologists identify dysphagia as a major risk in Australia’s ageing community, with silent aspiration and dehydration commonly overlooked Google Sites+2RACGP+2Wikipedia+2. Hospital data shows prevalence rates of up to 25 % in acute care, and post‑intensive care patients still show 7.9 % ongoing dysphagia sciencedirect.com+1australiancriticalcare.com+1. Such figures underscore the urgent need for accessible solutions.

Real‑World Impact: Lives Transformed
Consider Janet, 72, living independently on multiple daily tablets. Swallowing had become painful and anxiety‑filled—until she used Medasyst. “Now I place my tablet in, add mixer, and sip it like a juice—no fear, no stress,” she says. Similarly, aged‑care nurse Robbie shares: “Medasyst reduces risk and gives our residents back their dignity every morning.”

Beyond anecdote, reducing medication errors and hospital readmissions due to improper swallowing can substantially ease strain on the healthcare system. Provincial aged‑care best‑practice guidelines now highlight dysphagia management as a preventable cause of death if ignored The North Central ReviewUniversity of Technology Sydney.

dysphagia, medasyst, elderly care, swallowing difficulties, tablet to liquid, ultrasonic medicine, pill alternative, health technology Australia