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What s your name and what position do you hold? Hi, I am Ray Cahill. I work with a global healthcare company called Change Healthcare who provide solutions aimed at enabling better, more efficient healthcare systems. I am the Vice President for the International Business and am also the Chairperson for Healthtech Ireland Association. What are your day to day responsibilities? I work within our Enterprise Imaging business. We deliver digital software and services to assist clinicians diagnose radiology and cardiology images. In Ireland we have implemented and support the HSE’s National Integrated Medical Imaging System (NIMIS), which is used extensively throughout the country to support clinical care. ....
You are reading 1 of 15 free-access articles allowed for 30 days Members of HSE’s NIMIS Programme Team at the Health Informatics Society of Ireland conference. L-R: Mark Gilvarry; Emily Ennis (front); Mary McGee; Lisa Morrin; Keith Morrissey; Breda Matthews; and Gary Monk Sharper images: Diagnostic sharing, forged in Covid-19 pandemic By Contributor 14th January 2021 Ireland’s Image-Sharing solution is a rare exception to the rule that change takes time, owing to a uniquely effective collaboration involving the HSE and the independent Dublin-based healthcare technology company The uptake of medical technology is historically slow and arduous. Systems, people, and the technologies themselves are forced to adapt to each other, which can be a long journey. Decades separated the first use of an MRI scan, and the machines’ current ubiquity, with more than 50,000 operating around the world. ....
Sponsored: A sharper image new diagnostic sharing, forged in a pandemic In the face of Covid, digital sharing of patients’ information between the public and private healthcare sectors became an immediate requirement Sponsored Article #SPONSORED The uptake of medical technology is historically slow and arduous. Systems, people and the technologies themselves are forced to adapt to each other, which can be a long journey. Decades separated the first use of an MRI, and the machines’ current ubiquity, with more than 50,000 operating around the world. Likewise, nearly half a century has passed between the invention of CT scanning and the hundreds of millions of scans now produced each year. ....