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United States Army Selects Hologic's R2 Technology for Mammography Computer Aided Detection Equipment |
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Hologic today announced that the U.S. Army Medical Materiel Agency (USAMMA), Fort Detrick, Maryland, has selected Hologic for all of the mammography computer-aided detection (CAD) units the Army will purchase in 2007. The CAD systems will be installed in Army teaching Medical Centers, and large and small Army community hospitals throughout the U.S and Europe. |
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Versatile Biopsy System Means Efficiency |
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That's why radiologists and breast imaging center managers seek out multi-use equipment that can provide cost efficiency during times of budget belt-tightening. The equipment has to be versatile in a variety of clinical settings and easy to use. An example of this is core biopsy capabilities. |
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Group Buy Equips Entire City with Digital Mammography |
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In today's competitive health care environment, what happened in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, a Midwestern American city of 250,000 people, seems almost unthinkable. Four organizations vying for the same patients worked together to focus on the real bottom line - providing the best possible care for their community. For the first time, an entire city adopted Hologic digital mammography for breast cancer screening |
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Going Mobile in Alaska |
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In Alaska, where the leading cause of death is cancer, access to the latest medical care and technology can mean the difference between life and death. |
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Shifting to Digital Mammography System-Wide |
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Choosing the right technological fit requires research, patience, and timing. For the radiologists in South Florida's Memorial Healthcare System (MHS), having a team dedicated to pursuing the right technology at the right time made all the difference in a smooth switch to digital mammography. |
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Busy Practice Finds Educated Customers Demand Digital |
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When Raleigh Radiology Associates of Raleigh, North Carolina moved to a new office location, they decided the time was right to change they way they performed mammography and go digital. |
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Tomosythesis: The Next Big Leap in Breast Imaging |
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Darmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center at Dartmouth College offers cutting edge mammography technology to their patients thanks to the Hologic Selenia digital mammography system. Working with Hologic the Center is also actively involved in researching what is believed to be the next wave in mammography technology: tomosynthesis.
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Superior and compassionate breast care with cutting edge technology |
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Women that visit the Elizabeth Jekot MD Breast Imaging Center in Richardson, Texas get more than excellent healthcare and expert medical attention; they walk into an environment that was conceived and designed to be a soothing and compassionate place. |
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Totally Digital.With a Favorable ROI |
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Early in 2005, The Women's Center for Radiology, in Orlando, Florida, shut down their screen-film mammography systems and switched over to an entirely digital screening environment. |
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Beyond the Purchase, a Partnership for the Future |
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The new home for Hoag Breast Care Center in Newport Beach, California, is the Sue and Bill Gross Women's Pavilion. The Pavilion is a multi-million dollar medical facility dedicated to providing women with the highest quality health care services. |
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From Five Analog to Two Digital Mammography Systems With Productivity up Over 30% |
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The Breast Center at Sequoia Imaging in
California's San Joaquin Valley, recently replaced five
analog screen-film systems with two Hologic Selenia
systems. After only two months with the new Selenia systems,
the entire backlog has been cleared up. |
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Preparing Your Bone Density Practice for the Deficit Reduction Act |
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Faced with mounting deficits, and staring down the deadline
for the 2005 Christmas recess, Congressional lawmakers enacted a bill known as the Deficit Reduction |
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Strategic Agreement with Professor Klaus Engelke Brings Hologic Closer to Introducing 3D Hip Measures into QDR |
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Hologic today announced they have reached a strategic research agreement with Professor Klaus Engelke, Ph.D. Head of the Osteoporosis Research Center of the Institute of Medical Physics, University of Erlangen-Nürnberg in Germany. |