GE Healthcare Donates Ten Vscan™ Ultrasound Pocket-Sized Visualization Tool

GE HealthcareGE Healthcare announced a donation to the Vatican foundation "The Good Samaritan", created by Pope John Paul II and entrusted to Pontifical Council for Healthcare Workers, of ten Vscans, its latest ultrasound pocket-sized visualization tool. The ten Vscans will be destined for deployment in ten hospitals operating in the Northeast of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, which has been afflicted by war and insecurity since 1996. Vscans will be particularly useful in providing visual information for the main diagnostic activities, and can allow physicians to help save innumerable human lives, as the ones of pregnant women, soon-to-be-born babies and elderly people affected by disease which, once they are identified, may potentially no longer have fatal/lethal outcomes.

In light of the work the Vatican carries out in developing countries, Reinaldo Garcia, President & CEO of GE Healthcare - Europe, Middle East and Africa, whom has been received by His Holiness the Pope Benedict XVI at an audience yesterday, has offered the Vscan, to enhance the physical examination with an immediate, non-invasive method to help secure visual information about what is happening inside the body. This pocket-sized ultrasound technology will also aim to broaden access to healthcare to the local people of Africa, enabling clinicians to take healthcare to the patient rather than the patient to the healthcare provider. In some African countries the mere localization of a trained doctor is a real challenge, and can sometimes lead to a worsened condition (including reduced quality of care and increased healthcare costs), or even death.

"We are very pleased to make this donation to the Vatican for deployment across Africa. At GE Healthcare we are committed to developing more targeted technologies that will address the burden of healthcare not only in developed countries but also developing ones such as Africa, the latter primarily struggling with simple access to healthcare. We cannot afford not to," said Reinaldo Garcia. "Through healthymagination and the development of new technologies we are committed to help overcome main healthcare challenges such as cost, access and quality. It will require more collaboration, partnerships, clear thinking and the courage to do things differently, and at GE Healthcare we believe we can play a big part in this," concluded Garcia.

Roughly the size of a smart phone, GE Healthcare's Vscan houses powerful ultrasound technology that provides clinicians with an immediate, non-invasive method to help secure visual information about what is happening inside the body. Vscan is portable and can easily be taken from room to room to be used in many clinical, hospital, primary care settings or even more remote rural areas of Africa.(1)

In addition to the donation of leading ultrasound technologies, GE Healthcare will deliver clinical training to local African clinicians. GE has a broad team of global experts that will share best practice on how this technology is to be used. Vscan is designed with intuitive features to make it easy to use in both urban and rural areas of Africa.

The ability to take a quick look inside the body using Vscan may help clinicians detect disease earlier. The portability of these imaging devices and the capability to link to a PC to export data and transfer images via the Internet is well suited for countries in Africa, which simply do not on many cases have the infrastructure and /or manpower to provide care to the large population living in rural areas.

Related news articles:

About GE Healthcare
GE Healthcare provides transformational medical technologies and services that are shaping a new age of patient care. Our broad expertise in medical imaging and information technologies, medical diagnostics, patient monitoring systems, drug discovery, biopharmaceutical manufacturing technologies, performance improvement and performance solutions services help our customers to deliver better care to more people around the world at a lower cost. In addition, we partner with healthcare leaders, striving to leverage the global policy change necessary to implement a successful shift to sustainable healthcare systems.

Our "healthymagination" vision for the future invites the world to join us on our journey as we continuously develop innovations focused on reducing costs, increasing access and improving quality around the world. Headquartered in the United Kingdom, GE Healthcare is a unit of General Electric Company (NYSE: GE). Worldwide, GE Healthcare employees are committed to serving healthcare professionals and their patients in more than 100 countries. For more information about GE Healthcare, visit our website at www.gehealthcare.com.

1. Vscan has not been validated for outdoor use

Most Popular Now

Open Medical Works with Moray's Dig…

Open Medical is working with the Digital Health & Care Innovation Centre’s Rural Centre of Excellence on a referral management plan, as part of a research and development scheme to...

Generative AI on Track to Shape the Futu…

Using advanced artificial intelligence (AI), researchers have developed a novel method to make drug development faster and more efficient. In a new paper, Xia Ning, lead author of the study and...

Reorganisation, Consolidation, and Cuts:…

NHS England has been downsized and abolished. Integrated care boards have been told to change function, consolidate, and deliver savings. Trusts are planning big cuts. The Highland Marketing advisory board...

AI-Human Task-Sharing could Cut Mammogra…

The most effective way to harness the power of artificial intelligence (AI) when screening for breast cancer may be through collaboration with human radiologists - not by wholesale replacing them...

AI Tool Uses Face Photos to Estimate Bio…

Eyes may be the window to the soul, but a person's biological age could be reflected in their facial characteristics. Investigators from Mass General Brigham developed a deep learning algorithm...

Philips Future Health Index 2025 Report …

Royal Philips (NYSE: PHG, AEX: PHIA), a global leader in health technology, today unveiled its 2025 Future Health Index U.S. report, "Building trust in healthcare AI," spotlighting the state of...

AI-Powered Precision: Unlocking the Futu…

A team of researchers from the Department of Diagnostic and Therapeutic Ultrasonography at the Tianjin Medical University Cancer Institute & Hospital, have published a review in Cancer Biology & Medicine...

AI Model Improves Delirium Prediction, L…

An artificial intelligence (AI) model improved outcomes in hospitalized patients by quadrupling the rate of detection and treatment of delirium. The model identifies patients at high risk for delirium and...

SALSA: A New AI Tool for the Automated a…

Investigators of the Vall d'Hebron Institute of Oncology's (VHIO) Radiomics Group, led by Raquel Perez-Lopez, have developed SALSA (System for Automatic Liver tumor Segmentation And detection), a fully automated deep...

Call for Papers: AI Applications in Biom…

JMIR Biomedical Engineering is inviting submissions for a new section titled "AI Applications in Biomedical Engineering." This themed section explores the integration of biomedical engineering and artificial intelligence (AI), focusing...