ABSTRACT

Healthcare, as an elementary human entitlement, was not immune to new technology. The advancement of technology has made a substantial contribution to first-rate, on-time, acceptable, and cheap healthcare. Nanotechnology together with the Internet of Nanothings (IoNT) have consistently improved healthcare and significantly affected its evolution, resulting in better outcomes. Nanotechnology, through nanomaterials and nanodevices, aids medicine by providing many benefits such as illness prevention, diagnosis, and therapy. Tying nanodevices to the Internet adds to the IoNT paradigm. In medicine, IoNT models have resulted in more customized, timely, and appropriate health monitoring and therapy. As a result, nanotechnology and the IoNT are completely changing healthcare, enabling early illness detections and diagnoses, followed by precise, on-time, and successful treatment at considerably lower healthcare costs. This study debates nanotechnology and IoNT roles in welfare while trying to acquire an understanding of nanoscale solutions and techniques, highlighting advantages while also noting potential hazards and concerns. Despite the confidentiality, security, and nanotoxicity apprehensions, nanotechnology and IoNT will demonstrate their wide-ranging potential in medicine in the next years.