Eastman Kodak Health Group has received a multimillion dollar order for its DirectView CR and DR systems from the Regional Shared Health Information Program (RSHIP) in Alberta, Canada.
The order includes 43 CR systems, one DR 3000 system, and numerous laser imaging systems and film digitizers, according to the Rochester, NY-based vendor. The systems will be installed at 34 hospitals and healthcare centers within the David Thompson Health and East Central Health Regions over the next eight months, Kodak said.
RSHIP also ordered DirectView Capture Link systems, according to the firm.
By AuntMinnie.com staff writers
August 28, 2006
Related Reading
Kodak inks deal with Medlink, August 24, 2006
Kodak nets new DR contracts, August 8, 2006
Kodak Health Group's sales drop in Q2, August 2, 2006
Kodak debuts new products at AHRA, July 31, 2006
Kodak makes European RIS and PACS sales, July 28, 2006
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![Representative example of a 16-year-old male patient with underlying X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy. (A, B) Paired anteroposterior (AP) chest radiograph and dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DXA) report shows lumbar spine (L1 through L4) areal bone mineral density (BMD). The DXA report was reformatted for anonymization and improved readability. The patient had low BMD (Z score ≤ −2.0). (C) Model (chest radiography [CXR]–BMD) output shows the predicted raw BMD and Z score in comparison with the DXA reference standard, together with interpretability analyses using Shapley additive explanations (SHAP) and gradient-weighted class activation maps. The patient was classified as having low BMD, consistent with the reference standard. AM = age-matched, DEXA = dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry, RM2 = room 2, SNUH = Seoul National University Hospital, YA = young adult.](https://img.auntminnie.com/mindful/smg/workspaces/default/uploads/2026/04/ai-children-bone-density.0snnf2EJjr.jpg?auto=format%2Ccompress&fit=crop&h=112&q=70&w=112)



