GEHC Partners with Hawaii, North Carolina Health Networks on AI-Driven Hospital Operations
Both health systems will contribute their expertise to support the development of GEHC’s forthcoming cloud-first AI and predictive analytics Software as a Service (SaaS) package.
GE HealthCare (GEHC) has announced collaborations with The Queen’s Health Systems in Honolulu and Duke Health in Durham to develop AI-driven hospital operations software.
Both health systems will contribute their expertise to support the development of GEHC’s forthcoming cloud-first AI and predictive analytics Software as a Service (SaaS) package. The company said the new platform will build on its Command Center software, which currently supports nearly 500 healthcare facilities.
The collaboration aims to integrate hospital operations experience with real-world clinical insights to enhance operational efficiency and patient care.
In addition to this partnership, GE HealthCare has launched five new initiatives under its AI Innovation Lab. These include the development of an agentic AI diagnostic imaging assistant designed for integration into radiology devices.
The company is also collaborating with Mass General Brigham and the University of Wisconsin–Madison to refine its MRI foundation model. Another project focuses on creating an agentic AI algorithm to help care teams detect, evaluate, and report incidental findings on CT scans, aiding radiologists in clinical decision-making.
Further research efforts are directed toward supporting sustainable AI in tomographic imaging through energy-efficient neural networks. GE HealthCare has also introduced an internal generative AI algorithm intended to help its field service engineers troubleshoot medical equipment more efficiently.
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