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RSNA

The Future of Imaging Is Bright: GE HealthCare Innovation Lights Up RSNA

Sophie Hares
Amanda Gintoft
November 30, 2022

As the healthcare industry feels the pressure of burgeoning costs and staff shortages, rapid advances in technology are playing a vital role in delivering efficient clinical care, from discovery and diagnosis to targeted treatment planning.

While the pandemic has left many hospitals struggling to meet backlogged demand, the benefits of the acceleration it prompted in digital healthcare and cutting-edge medical imaging technology are here to stay.

Press Release

GE Healthcare Highlights Transformative Precision Innovations and Collaborations that Help Drive the Future of Health

November 27, 2022

Chicago, US November 27, 2022 Ahead of its planned spinoff from GE the first week of January 2023, GE Healthcare reveals over 40 solutions that aim to improve patient outcomes and increase healthcare efficiency at the Radiological Society of North America’s (RSNA) 2022 Annual Meeting.

For media inquiries, please contact:

Kyerstin Hill
External Affairs
GE Healthcare
+1 708 738 7741
[email protected]

business unit
tags
Electrification Software Healthcare

Planet Of The Apps: How A New Digital Health Platform Will Help Providers Make Smarter Use Of Patient Data

Jodi Helmer
March 15, 2022
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The newest healthcare apps can do everything from monitor health conditions and track medications to provide remote access to medical records. The offerings should allow clinicians to boost efficiencies, helping them improve both clinical decision-making and patient care.

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medicine

Flesh Memory: This Company Uploaded The Heart Into The Cloud

Tomas Kellner
December 15, 2016
GER: You didn’t turn Steven into an engineer, but he turned you into a moviemaker.
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Medical Imaging

See the Heart in 7 Dimensions: This Team of Researchers Attacks World’s Biggest Killer with Software

Drew Field
December 03, 2015
By the time you’re done reading this story, heart disease will have killed nearly 40 people in Europe. The picture elsewhere isn’t much different. The World Health Organization reported earlier this year that more people die from cardiovascular disease than from any other cause.
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