In the quest to expand access to prenatal care to communities with limited healthcare services, GE Global Research, the technology development arm for the General Electric Company, said that it has been awarded a two-year, $1.2 million project under the federal stimulus program from the National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering, part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH).
GE said that the project is for the development of a low-cost transducer for portable ultrasound systems that maintains the highest degree of image quality. The transducer is the device placed on the abdomen of an expectant mom, which transmits and receives signals that generate real-time images of activity inside the womb.
In a release, the Company noted that the development of a low-cost transducer would greatly support its healthymagination vision by expanding ultrasound use beyond the hospital and into underserved communities worldwide. Healthymagination represents GE's commitment to drive new technologies and products that reduce costs, improve quality and increase access to healthcare. Expanding ultrasound use to underserved communities could help improve the detection and diagnosis of life-threatening maternal conditions such as ectopic pregnancy, placental previa, and fetal malposition. Ultrasound is also capable of accurately prognosing preeclampsia - a dangerous form of hypertension that arises in pregnancy. According to the World Health Organization, approximately 1,400 women die each day from maternal causes and for every woman who dies, twenty more suffer injuries, infection, and disability in pregnancy and childbirth.
"We can make prenatal care more accessible by simplifying the use and reducing the cost of medical ultrasound systems," said Scott Smith, Principal Investigator on the transducer project for GE Global Research. "To get there, the industry needs a breakthrough to substantially lower the cost of ultrasound transducers. We are working on a new printing technique in the lab that could deliver the manufacturing process needed to make this possible."
Smith added, "In addition to reducing the cost of the transducer, GE is developing new technology that will make ultrasound easier to master, use, and interpret. We can build new intelligence into these systems that can assist in spotting potential issues. These mobile, high quality, and easy-to-use ultrasound systems will allow a wider range of providers to deliver better quality healthcare, and to do it in more places, like ambulances and small doctor's offices, not just hospitals and specialists."
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