October 12, 2012 — Mindray Medical International Ltd., a leading developer, manufacturer and marketer of medical devices worldwide, announced that it will demonstrate the new DC-8 ultrasound system at the American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP) annual meeting being held in Denver Oct. 8 to 10, 2012.
Mindray North America. "Suitable for a wide variety of applications, the DC-8 will help improve patient management, increase ease of use and offer excellent value," said Michael Thompson, vice president of Ultrasound Sales.
Mindray North America also announced that it has partnered with the Emergency Medicine Foundation (EMF) to underwrite a grant for point-of-care ultrasound, providing further insight into ultrasound's benefits in emergency medicine. EMF will be developing the grant topic in collaboration with Vicki Noble, M.D., emergency physician at Boston's Massachusetts General Hospital and ultrasound section chair for ACEP. The grant is intended to support research, which central hypothesis is that point-of-care ultrasound performed by emergency physicians or mid-level practitioners improves patient outcomes, reduces costs and limits the necessity for more expensive and potentially harmful follow-up imaging studies. While prior research has documented the speed and accuracy of diagnosis when emergency physicians perform ultrasound, there is a paucity of data on patient outcomes and the impact of point of care ultrasound on patient safety, healthcare costs or the use of additional imaging methods.
"We are excited to work collaboratively with organizations like EMF within emergency medicine and across the specialties to advance point-of-care ultrasound and ultimately, help improve the care of the 116.8 million emergency department patients treated each year," Thompson added. "We understand the impact ultrasound is having on the way clinicians deliver care today, and strive to advance its utility and ease of use for professionals as well as positively impact patients."
The DC-8 ultrasound system supports the most demanding applications and offers ergonomic features such as a height-adjustable control panel and monitor, which can swivel and rotate effortlessly. Intuitively grouped control keys, dials and toggles enhance comfort while lightweight transducers are designed with soft, flexible cables to reduce stress while scanning. The machine improves speed, accuracy and productivity while maintaining the flexibility needed to complete exams comfortably and efficiently.
The company also announced it has partnered with Telexy Healthcare to streamline reporting workflow at the bedside. Telexy Healthcare, based in Port Coquitlam, BC, Canada, is focused on simplifying and building intelligence into healthcare processes using smart web-based, data-driven software applications. These processes can be automated, reducing healthcare costs and improving safety and compliance. Telexy's Q-path workflow manager was designed to meet the specific needs of departments performing ultrasound at the point-of-care, including emergency medicine, anesthesia and critical care. Seamlessly connecting to information systems using established standards such as digital imaging and communications in medicine (DICOM) and HL7, Q-path communicates with your picture archive and communications system (PACS), admit/discharge/transfer (ADT), EMR, ultrasound order system and active directory. Q-path provides a solution to help you manage a quality ultrasound program and integrate with your teaching curriculum. Q-path can be hosted on-premise or on a cloud server, and Telexy's Q-path Cloud makes it easy and practical to provide remote training, peer review and consultation anywhere in the world.
For more information: ir.mindray.com