Sam Brusco, Associate Editor12.05.23
GE HealthCare began a commercialization agreement with AirStrip, a vendor-agnostic clinical surveillance technology company and member of the Nantworks group of artificial intelligence (AI)-driven companies.
GE HealthCare became the exclusive distributor of AirStrip cardiology and patient monitoring solutions in the U.S. AirStrip’s native mobile application lets clinicians see clinical data on mobile devices and the web. Healthcare professionals can access cardiac rhythm strips and 12-lead ECGs, view multiple patients simultaneously, receive STEMI notifications, and communicate with the care team.
The deal beings together GE HealthCare’s ECG, cardiac output, and patient monitoring products with AirStrip’s advanced data visualization and monitoring capabilities. The duo said the collaboration is designed as a combined offering to help increase clinical staff productivity, collaboration, and communication.
“We are thrilled to advance our collaboration with GE HealthCare by committing to a much deeper integration between their exceptional patient monitoring and our mobile and web clinical surveillance,” said Dr. Patrick Soon-Shiong, AirStrip CEO. “Leveraging GE HealthCare’s platform, we will be able to offer a joint solution that empowers clinical teams to receive clinical and vital signs information remotely in near real time and effectively deal with constraints on clinical resources while enhancing clinicians’ user experiences.”
“We are proud to be the exclusive distributor of AirStrip’s innovative cardiac and monitoring technology,” added Catherine Estrampes, president and CEO, U.S. and Canada, GE HealthCare. “Our expanded collaboration underscores our commitment to listen closely to the needs of our clinicians and deliver world-class solutions. As an independent company broadening our relationship with AirStrip, there is unlimited opportunity to advance the future of real-time and remote patient monitoring. Our unified solution is less manual, enabling clinicians to manage workloads more efficiently, easing the way to improved patient care. This is critically important in the current environment of clinician shortages and burnout.”
GE HealthCare became the exclusive distributor of AirStrip cardiology and patient monitoring solutions in the U.S. AirStrip’s native mobile application lets clinicians see clinical data on mobile devices and the web. Healthcare professionals can access cardiac rhythm strips and 12-lead ECGs, view multiple patients simultaneously, receive STEMI notifications, and communicate with the care team.
The deal beings together GE HealthCare’s ECG, cardiac output, and patient monitoring products with AirStrip’s advanced data visualization and monitoring capabilities. The duo said the collaboration is designed as a combined offering to help increase clinical staff productivity, collaboration, and communication.
“We are thrilled to advance our collaboration with GE HealthCare by committing to a much deeper integration between their exceptional patient monitoring and our mobile and web clinical surveillance,” said Dr. Patrick Soon-Shiong, AirStrip CEO. “Leveraging GE HealthCare’s platform, we will be able to offer a joint solution that empowers clinical teams to receive clinical and vital signs information remotely in near real time and effectively deal with constraints on clinical resources while enhancing clinicians’ user experiences.”
“We are proud to be the exclusive distributor of AirStrip’s innovative cardiac and monitoring technology,” added Catherine Estrampes, president and CEO, U.S. and Canada, GE HealthCare. “Our expanded collaboration underscores our commitment to listen closely to the needs of our clinicians and deliver world-class solutions. As an independent company broadening our relationship with AirStrip, there is unlimited opportunity to advance the future of real-time and remote patient monitoring. Our unified solution is less manual, enabling clinicians to manage workloads more efficiently, easing the way to improved patient care. This is critically important in the current environment of clinician shortages and burnout.”