| STANISLAUS
COUNTY – The Stanislaus County Health Services Agency (HSA)
has just purchased and installed two new HDI 5000 diagnostic ultrasound
machines.
The HDI 5000 units are manufactured by ATL Ultrasound, a Philips Medical
Systems company, and provide high-tech replacements for older ultrasound
equipment formerly used the HSA. The new machines are the same used by
the Cleveland Clinic, Stanford Medical Center and UC Davis Medical Center.
According to Bev Finley, Managing Director for the HSA, "ultrasound
is a tremendous technology for detecting disease early and getting people
on the road to good health. Adding these machines to our health system
will help to save lives."
Ultrasound technology is used for internal imaging of the body including
obstetrics and gynecology, looking at internal organs like the kidneys
and liver, and for imaging blood flow through veins and arteries. The
HDI 5000 system gives clinicians unprecedented capabilities by providing
features such as MicroFine Grayscale Imaging, digital Broadband Flow Imaging,
Tissue Harmonic Imaging, Pulse Inversion Harmonics technology and adaptive
system intelligence.
An onboard 18.1gigabyte storage system allows images to be stored and
pulled up at a later time for medical review. The new machines also have
512 channels vs. the standard 128 channels, meaning five times more computer
processing power.
The Stanislaus County Health Services Agency (HSA) is an outpatient medical
system with 9 medical offices located throughout Stanislaus County. The
HSA operates the Public Health Department, an Urgent Care Center and multiple
programs serving over 400,000 patients and clients each year in Stanislaus
County. The HSA also is in local partnerships for the MOMobile project
and the Stanislaus Family Practice Residency Program. The HSA has extensive
community health information available at its web site www.schsa.org
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