Healthymagination Brought to Life by Warwick Health Partnership

GEThe University of Warwick, GE Healthcare, University Hospitals Coventry and Warwickshire Trust (UHCW) and Coventry Council have joined forces to create ‘Warwick Healthcare Partnership’ (WHP) in an effort to seek strategies to combat some of the most important chronic diseases responsible for millions of deaths per year worldwide. The three-way consortium brings together expertise from academia, industry, medicine and the community to address key health problems of heart disease, neurology, and infant and maternal health that affect resource-poor communities whether in Coventry or Africa.

Professor Tim Jones, Pro-Vice Chancellor at the University of Warwick, said: "Problems like heart disease and high infant mortality are simply too complex and important for one organisation to tackle alone. That's why by joining forces and sharing our expertise in this consortium, we hope to advance healthcare and patient treatments in a speedier, efficient and more effective way."

Speaking before the launch event, Marc Barlow, Head of Strategic Marketing at GE Healthcare, stated: "From jet engines to power generation, financial services to plastics, and transportation to medical imaging, GE is dedicated to turning good ideas into technologies that make the world a better place. By bringing together world-class researchers and skilled practitioners, the Warwick Health Partnership will develop new innovative pathways to deliver healthcare for under-resourced populations across the globe."

Although the Partnership was only officially launched at the end of May, work has been underway for some time; not just in the UK, but also in resource-poor countries such as Malawi and Tanzania.

WHP is currently examining whether the use of GE Healthcare's Vscan [1], a pocket-sized visualization tool for point-of-care imaging, in the primary care setting could help drive down healthcare costs and ultimately deliver better care for patients.

Dr. Alan Davies of GE Healthcare, one of the architects of the project commented: "This Partnership is closely aligned with GE's healthymagination aims of providing better health for more people. In this case it's about analyzing the needs of resource poor communities, and establishing sustainable programmes that can be driven and developed locally with continued support from the consortium."

Launched in 2009, healthymagination is GE’s $6 billion global commitment to provide better health for more people by lowering costs and increasing access. GE has committed that by 2015 it will: invest $3 billion in research and development to launch at least 100 innovations that will help deliver better care to more people at lower cost; provide $2 billion in financing and $1 billion in technology to bring healthcare information technology to rural and underserved areas; reduce the cost of procedures that use GE technologies and services by 15 percent and develop products tailored to underserved regions of the world, and reach 100 million more people every year with services and technologies essential for health.

Dr. Davies recently returned from sub-Saharan Africa, where the Warwick Health Partnership is managing a project aimed at evaluating the implementation of a structured education, leadership training and workforce development programme for maternal and perinatal survival in different communities in Malawi and Tanzania.

Maternal mortality and morbidity associated with pregnancy remain major challenges to improving health in Africa. Globally, six hundred thousand women die every year as a result of complications from pregnancy and childbirth, and most are preventable [2]. Human resources and the effective service delivery of appropriate sustainable technologies have been identified as key areas that need support if this global iniquity in health is to be improved. The Millennium Development Goals 4 and 5 of reducing maternal mortality and perinatal death can only be achieved by developing and evaluating innovative transferable and sustainable solutions through collaboration between African and International partnerships.[3]

A key element to the project will be local and international physicians providing continuing support and mentorship for Non-Physician Clinicians (NPCs) in the workplace using communications technology. Bringing together key European and African partners with GE Healthcare to address the major issues of enhancing a sustainable healthcare workforce should help to significantly reduce the loss of mothers and babies in Africa.

"The project is due to end in 2014, but we're working with the respective governments to ensure the project is sustainable," added Dr. Davies. "We are enabling the Malawians to establish their own courses. We've already received an £80,000 grant from the Malawian government to further develop the programme and eventually there will be people there full time. However, the local NPCs are the leaders of this, and they are the agents of change. Empowerment of the NPCs is at the heart of this programme."

Looking forward to what's next, Dr. Davies added: "Our work doesn't stop, we want to undertake ground-breaking projects to help us address the needs of the under-served, under resourced communities, whether in Coventry, East London or Malawi. We want to deliver quality healthcare at the right time at the right price, and together we can do that."

Related news articles:

About GE
GE (NYSE: GE) works on things that matter. The best people and the best technologies taking on the toughest challenges. Finding solutions in energy, health and home, transportation and finance. Building, powering, moving and helping to cure the world. Not just imagining. Doing. GE works.

About GE's healthymagination Initiative
Launched in May 2009, GE's healthymagination initiative is focused on four critical needs: low-cost technology; healthcare IT; innovation accessible to all; and consumer-driven healthcare. GE has committed that by 2015 it will:

  • Invest $3 billion in research and development to launch at least 100 innovations that will help deliver better care to more people at lower cost.
  • Provide $2 billion in financing and $1 billion in technology to bring healthcare information technology to rural and underserved areas.
  • Reduce the cost of procedures that use GE technologies and services by 15 percent and develop products tailored to underserved regions of the world.
  • Reach 100 million more people every year with services and technologies essential for health.

1. Trademark of General Electric Company
2. World Health Organization
3. Enhancing Human Resources and Use of Appropriate Technologies for Maternal and Perinatal Survival in Sub-Saharan Africa (ETATMBA) Project Research Protocol

Most Popular Now

ChatGPT can Produce Medical Record Notes…

The AI model ChatGPT can write administrative medical notes up to ten times faster than doctors without compromising quality. This is according to a new study conducted by researchers at...

Alcidion and Novari Health Forge Strateg…

Alcidion Group Limited, a leading provider of FHIR-native patient flow solutions for healthcare, and Novari Health, a market leader in waitlist management and referral management technologies, have joined forces to...

Can Language Models Read the Genome? Thi…

The same class of artificial intelligence that made headlines coding software and passing the bar exam has learned to read a different kind of text - the genetic code. That code...

Study Shows Human Medical Professionals …

When looking for medical information, people can use web search engines or large language models (LLMs) like ChatGPT-4 or Google Bard. However, these artificial intelligence (AI) tools have their limitations...

Advancing Drug Discovery with AI: Introd…

A transformative study published in Health Data Science, a Science Partner Journal, introduces a groundbreaking end-to-end deep learning framework, known as Knowledge-Empowered Drug Discovery (KEDD), aimed at revolutionizing the field...

Bayer and Google Cloud to Accelerate Dev…

Bayer and Google Cloud announced a collaboration on the development of artificial intelligence (AI) solutions to support radiologists and ultimately better serve patients. As part of the collaboration, Bayer will...

Shared Digital NHS Prescribing Record co…

Implementing a single shared digital prescribing record across the NHS in England could avoid nearly 1 million drug errors every year, stopping up to 16,000 fewer patients from being harmed...

Ask Chat GPT about Your Radiation Oncolo…

Cancer patients about to undergo radiation oncology treatment have lots of questions. Could ChatGPT be the best way to get answers? A new Northwestern Medicine study tested a specially designed ChatGPT...

North West Anglia Works with Clinisys to…

North West Anglia NHS Foundation Trust has replaced two, legacy laboratory information systems with a single instance of Clinisys WinPath. The trust, which serves a catchment of 800,000 patients in North...

Can AI Techniques Help Clinicians Assess…

Investigators have applied artificial intelligence (AI) techniques to gait analyses and medical records data to provide insights about individuals with leg fractures and aspects of their recovery. The study, published in...

AI Makes Retinal Imaging 100 Times Faste…

Researchers at the National Institutes of Health applied artificial intelligence (AI) to a technique that produces high-resolution images of cells in the eye. They report that with AI, imaging is...

GPT-4 Matches Radiologists in Detecting …

Large language model GPT-4 matched the performance of radiologists in detecting errors in radiology reports, according to research published in Radiology, a journal of the Radiological Society of North America...