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	<title>Medical Blog :: Health Care &#187; Medical  Technology</title>
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		<title>Royal Philips &#8211; On the Road to Monarch of Medical Equipment</title>
		<link>http://www.medicalwho.com/blog/royal-philips-on-the-road-to-monarch-of-medical-equipment/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 06 Dec 2007 03:58:12 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Jeroen</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Medical  Technology]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[&#8220;Back in 1998, Royal Philips Electronics fathered the Philips Healthcare Services group and appears determined that &#8220;&#8221;the son&#8221;" will soon become King of the medical equipment industry. Apparently, this move was in response to GE Medical Systemsï¿½ announcement that it planned on becoming king itself of the ultrasound industry before the year 2000. Not to [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>&#8220;Back in 1998, Royal Philips Electronics fathered the Philips Healthcare Services group and appears determined that &#8220;&#8221;the son&#8221;" will soon become King of the medical equipment industry. Apparently, this move was in response to GE Medical Systemsï¿½ announcement that it planned on becoming king itself of the ultrasound industry before the year 2000. Not to be &#8220;&#8221;out-royaled&#8221;", Philips from the first year started an acquisition frenzy in order to expand its subsidiaryï¿½s product portfolio well beyond its original product line, which began in 1918 with medical x-ray tubes.</p>
<p>Concluding Philips Healthcare Services first year, Philips Electronics added digital ultrasound systems to PHSï¿½s portfolio by getting ATL Ultrasound of Washington. Only 2 years later, in late 2000, Philips grew into nuclear medicine by absorbing ADAC Laboratories of California.</p>
<p>In 2001 was a watershed year as Philips shifted into a very high gear by bringing on two more companies and their product lines ï¿½ Agilent and Marconi Medical. By procuring Agilent Technologiesï¿½ Healthcare Solutions Group of Massachusetts, Philips catapulted past GE Medical as the head of the ultrasound sector. Philips took in Agilentï¿½s expertise in the areas of diagnostic cardiology, automated defibrillators, patient monitoring, and point of care diagnostic systems.</p>
<p>Marconi Medical Systems of Ohio, formerly Picker International, was already a huge part in its own right among gigantinc global CT suppliers. With Marconi, Philips obtained cutting-edge multi-slice CT technology along with cardiology, oncology and PET/CT imaging applications. These two acquisitions in one year put Philips in the top three for the entire medical equipment industry along with giants Siemens and GE Medical ï¿½ some say as number 2.</p>
<p>In 2005, the growth continued as Philips bought Stentor, Inc. of California, provider best-in-class picture archiving and communications systems (PACS). This let Philips to aid its clients successfully control the many amounts of imaging data created by its medical scanners. Then, the following year, the growth continued as Philips adopted Witt Biomedical Corporation, the biggest independent supplier of Cath Lab monitoring and reporting systems.</p>
<p>In its drive to become King of the Medical Equipment industry, Philips Healthcare Services has obtained six companies since its inception in 1998. Every single one of the six has expanded Philipsï¿½ offerings to include a total of ten medical imaging modalities, from CT to MRI to x-ray, along with defibrillation and cardiac monitoring equipment as well as image and information management solutions.</p>
<p>So, has Philips entered the royal industry castle yet? Some believe they have. As a matter of fact, prior to the last two acquisitions, Palo Altoï¿½s ï¿½growth consultingï¿½ company Frost &amp; Sullivan seemed to believe so. In 2004 Frost &amp; Sullivan told everyone they were awarding Philips FIVE awards for ï¿½technology and services innovation and industry leadershipï¿½. Philips was honored for making distinguished contributions to the cardiac resuscitation and medical imaging industries and for providing leadership in these market segments.</p>
<p>Was Frost &amp; Sullivan just looking for a spot at the royal court or were these legitimate kudos? Probably the later. F&amp;S conducted interviews with many market players along with their customers and suppliers, and reportedly did extensive research into the medical equipment technology field.</p>
<p>One of the many awards included the regent-like titles of ï¿½Medical Imaging Company of the Yearï¿½, ï¿½New Care Setting of the Yearï¿½, and ï¿½Medical Imaging Technology of the Yearï¿½. The other 2 were for Technology Leadership and Services Innovation Leadership.</p>
<p>The answer of Jouko Karvinen, president and CEO of Philips Medical Systems, to the what he recieved sounded like the exact same of an industry coronation speech. He stated, &#8220;&#8221;We proudly recieve the Frost &amp; Sullivan Awards as an independent validation of Philips business and technology leadershipï¿½. These 5 awards are more indicators that Philips continues to set the industry standard for developing innovative products that help treat patients and save lives.ï¿½&#8221;</p>
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