GE Healthcare presents digital solutions applied to cardiology, radiology

Daily News Egypt
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Doctors and a paramedic work at an organ transplant operation theatre at Mansoura University hospital, 210 km (130 miles) north of Cairo, December 24, 2009. Egypt will draft a new organ transplant law that would allow taking organs from dead donors. The law has been presented to the parliament many times over past ten years and has been rejected but this year, the government adopted it and drafted it to parliament. REUTERS/Tarek Mostafa (EGYPT - Tags: POLITICS RELIGION)
GE Healthcare has presented its digital solutions at an event entitled “GE Healthcare Dialogues – Elevating Digital Healthcare” and has highlighted the challenges of digital transition in healthcare.
During the conference, experts discussed the challenges they face in different areas like radiology and cardiology and looking at how digital technology is helping to revolutionise the traditional scope medical care and ways of working in these areas.
GE Healthcare introduced several solutions and demonstrated their impact in breaking down traditional silos across departments, hospitals, and entire cities, namely AW Server used in radiology, a platform for an efficient and automated workflow, allowing better time, equipment, costs, and resources management, while enhancing a team’s ability to collaborate and provide a diagnosis.
Besides, Centricity Cardio Enterprise used in cardiology is a comprehensive IT solution that offers cardiologists a single point of access to patient data, images, and reports across the continuum of care while enhancing physician productivity and improving charge capture accuracy.
GE Healthcare highlighted that centricity 360 is a collaboration tool that enables intuitive yet advanced clinician collaboration, seamless medical device connectivity and embedded healthcare analytics – all with comprehensive end-user controls and data management.
AI was also discussed during the conference. “AI in healthcare has seen a significant rise over the last couple of years, especially in radiology” explained Amro Kandil, Managing Director, GE Healthcare in North East Africa. “The 2017 PwC DIQ Survey found that 39% of healthcare managers were planning to invest in artificial intelligence, which indicates its rapid growth.
Through the use of AI and machine learning, we see a future where the combination of in-vivo and in-vitro data sets can provide new insights on the underlying causes of disease”, he added.
More precise diagnosis, precise therapy and new innovative ways of monitoring patients are the means by which costs in the industry can be better controlled and outcomes improved for patients. These themes are key concerns for governments and healthcare systems across the world.
Currently, GE Healthcare co-invests with customers on these exciting new areas and has demonstrated already that workflows for radiologists and provide clinical decision support tools for doctors can be improved.
GE Healthcare’s intelligence offering comprises of applications and smart devices built using the Edison platform. The platform is used by GE Healthcare’s internal developers and select strategic partners. It is a comprehensive and extensible intelligence platform that accelerates the development of advanced applications, services, and artificial intelligence algorithms.
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