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He has associations with the British Cardiac Patients Association, the Ambulance Service and Philips Medical Systems. [3] [4] Trust Medical is the UK's first company to specialise in providing resuscitation equipment, [5] first aid training and occupational health services to UK organisations. [6] [7] Trust Medical was closed the 29th January 2017.
Roderic Ivan Pettigrew is an American physicist, engineer, and physician who is CEO of EnHealth and Executive Dean for EnMed at Texas A&M University. From 2002-November 2017, he was the founding director of the National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering (NIBIB) at the National Institutes of Health (NIH). [1]
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In the early years ADAC developed both small nuclear medicine related hardware and software products but between 1975 and the 1980s, become better known for their computer systems such as the CDS and DPS acquisition and processing systems. In 1987–88 ADAC maintained Philips ARC gamma camera installed base under licence and In ~1991 Philips ...
Philips Medical Systems Technologies Ltd. is a developer and manufacturer of computerized tomography (CT), diagnostic and medical imaging systems. The company was founded in 1969 as Elscint by Elron Electronic Industries and was acquired by Marconi Medical Systems in 1998, which was itself acquired by Philips in 2001.
Elekta has acquired companies within the industry as well as distributors and service providers. Some of these include: Philips Medical Systems radiotherapy division, [2] IMPAC Medical Systems, Inc., [3] Beijing Medical Equipment Institute (BMEI), [4] 3D Line Medical Systems, [5] CMS, Inc., [6] Nucletron, [7] ProKnow Systems, LLC, [8] Kaiku Health.
Respironics is an American medical supply company owned by Philips that specializes in products that improve respiratory functions. It is based in the Pittsburgh suburb of Murrysville in Pennsylvania, United States. Some of its products had hazardous foam that disintegrated and entered patients' bodies.
Philips Medical Systems for example produced one such device called the 'Polytome'. [4] This pluridirectional unit was still in use into the 1990s, as its resulting images for small or difficult physiology, such as the inner ear, were still difficult to image with CTs at that time.