NEWS REVIEW INDIA
Trivitron and Brandon Medical (UK) announces JV for manufacturing advanced OT Lights in IndiaTrivitron recently announced its alliance with Brandon […]
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Trivitron and Brandon Medical (UK) announces JV for manufacturing advanced OT Lights in IndiaTrivitron recently announced its alliance with Brandon […]
Chandigarh to connect local health centres with telemedicine project In order to provide more quality health care to its people, […]
Tennessee with AT&T creates health info exchange AT&T Inc. is partnering with Tennessee to provide the country’s first statewide system […]
Microsoft, SAP provide solutions for healthcare IT Microsoft Corp. and SAP America Inc., a subsidiary of SAP AG, have agreed […]
India gets a radio station on disaster management The country's first radio station on disaster management was launched on 23 […]
A tie-up to boost the flow of telemedicine Oklahoma State University Center for Health Sciences Telemedicine Center has selected Spacenet […]
ICT deployment in hospitals can cut operating costsOnce hospitals exceed a certain tipping point in its IT investments, they see […]
Texas Instruments (TI), the global information technology company, has signed a four-year collaborative agreement with the School of Medical Science and Technology of Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur (IIT-KGP), to develop semiconductor technologies that will help improve the quality, comfort and accessibility of healthcare in India.
Middle East Healthcare Innovations Summit – endorsed by the Ministry of Health, United Arab Emirates – is the region
The objective of the Drug Check project is to validate an on-line, pan-European service, which gathers, organises, stores, makes available and presents information and data covering pharmaceuticals and their interactions.
Cardiology experts say that a computer simulation of the human heart created by animators at special effects company Glassworks could revolutionise surgical training.
Cambridge Consultants announced recently the first demonstration of the emerging industry standards for medical device interoperability. The ‘Vena’ platform is a breakthrough software solution on a single chip that allows medical devices such as blood pressure monitors to transmit data wirelessly.
Scientists have used supercomputing power to create “virtual physiological humans” (VPH) to serve as test subjects for a new HIV drug, which might lead to the concept of testing drugs on digital patients in the future.