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It’s all about the Veterans: Why physicians choose VA
VA physicians enjoy many perks and rewards, especially the chance to serve a unique patient population
When we ask physicians why they work at VA, their answers run the gamut – flexibility, a supportive atmosphere, loan repayment, the chance to research and teach, and more time to spend with patients. But there’s one common theme we hear again and again from our doctors about why they have chosen VA. It’s all about the Veterans.
“It is the purpose of taking care of our Veterans – that is, to give the best of ourselves to those who served our country to protect the life the rest of us live,” said Dr. Eric Sargent, M.D., a urologist at the Cheyenne VA Medical Center. “From a doctor’s standpoint, there is no better opportunity to achieve this purpose than making the health of our Veterans the highest priority.”
VA Doctor Dispels Myths that 5G Could Make People Sick istockphoto
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There’s no scientific evidence linking the emergence of fifth-generation wireless technologies to COVID-19 or cancer, the Veterans Affairs Department’s Dr. Ryan Vega confirmed Tuesday.
But that doesn’t mean there aren’t other risks as 5G comes to fruition inside America’s hospitals. So, as an early federal adopter, VA is proceeding thoughtfully, he said, to ensure the heaps of new attack vectors that come with it don’t put patients in harm s way.
“I think we re going to see more impact on actually how we experience health care, with little concern to our own individual health, Vega told
By GCN Staff
Mar 02, 2021
The Department of Veterans Affairs is installing 5G networks at its Miami and Puget Sound health care facilities.
Working with T-Mobile, which currently provides the in-building 4G LTE wireless connectivity at the Miami Health Care System, the VA will install in-building 5G radios for 2.5 GHz spectrum to deliver speeds of 300 megabit/sec with peaks up to 1 gigabit/sec.
The faster network will allow medical teams to quickly move and access large, complex data files, such as imaging results, labs and medical charts, without having to be tethered to a computer, the company said.
T-Mobile already provides up to 70,000 lines of wireless service to doctors, nurses and hospital staff across VA hospitals and has helped enhance access to the VA s telehealth platform, VA Video Connect.
By Ross Wilkers
Feb 02, 2021
AT&T and the Veterans Affairs Department have in partnership turned the initial lights on for a 5G and related multiple-access edge computing network at one of the VA’s largest health care hubs.
While there is more to come, the Puget Sound Health Care System in Seattle now has a distributed antenna system compatible with the needed spectrum and other components needed to enable 5G capabilities.
The Puget Sound system’s new mental health and research building is one of those components that now has 5G coverage. AT&T and the VA eye further deployments of multiple-access edge computing and 5G spectrum later this year at faster speeds and better latency throughout the complex.
AT&T Deploying 5G MEC for Veterans Health Care Posted on Share
Home » AT&T Deploying 5G MEC for Veterans Health Care
AT&T and the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs are deploying 5G multi-access computing (MEC) across the Puget Sound Health Care System in Seattle.
AT&T says that this is the industry’s first deployment of 5G and MEC across an entire VA health care and training facility. So far, a 5G distributed antenna system (DAS) has been installed. MEC and 5G mmWave spectrum infrastructure will be deployed this year.
AT&T identifies four use cases that could be piloted. They include: