Life
| Jun 25, 2021

Supreme Ventures donates top-tier ultrasound machine to UHWI

/ Our Today

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Gary Peart ( right), executive chairman at Supreme Ventures Limited, is happy to be scanned by Dr Sundeep Shah, head of Diagnostics and Interventional Radiology, using a recently donated mobile ultrasound machine at the University Hospital of the West Indies. The vital equipment was donated by the Supreme Ventures Foundation.

The University Hospital of the West Indies’ (UHWI) diagnostic department received a boost this week with the donation of a state-of-the-art mobile ultrasound machine from the Supreme Ventures Foundation (SVF).

The machine, which was financed by the SVF in March, finally arrived at the hospital and will be integrated into the UHWI’s diagnostic network in the coming days.

One of the key benefits of the equipment that was described as the “Rolls Royce of ultrasound machines” is its data compatibility with the UHWI’s information network that can be accessed remotely.

Heather Goldson (left), director of the Supreme Ventures Foundation, Dr. Sundeep Shah (second left), head of Diagnostics and Interventional Radiology at the University Hospital of the West Indies (UHWI), Gary Peart ( second right) , executive chairman at SVL, and Angela Curtiss (right), senior director, Corporate & Project Planning at the UHWI, celebrate during the handover of a mobile ultrasound machine donated by the Supreme Ventures Foundation. This specific model can be integrated with the hospital’s information system (HIMS), and the images can be accessed and viewed by doctors remotely as it is Wi-Fi compatible.

During a formal handover days before SVL celebrated its 20th anniversary on June 25, Supreme Ventures Executive Chairman Gary Peart said the donation was brought about by clear and open communication between the Foundation and the hospital’s executives, who expressed the need in the height of the COVID-19 fight.

“While we have always been supportive of national efforts to improve health care through our annual good cause donations to government bodies, this effort symbolises a more intimate partnership, to provide the resources for an urgent specific need,” said Peart.

“It speaks to the level of open communication that must be established between health care institutions that sit on the frontline of pandemics and daily emergencies and private entities who have the resources and stand at the ready to assist.”

Gary Peart, executive chairman at Supreme Ventures Group, said the donation of a state-of-the-art ultrasound machine was brought about by clear and open communication between the Supreme Ventures Foundation and the executives of the University Hospital of the West Indies (UHWI) who expressed the need in the height of the COVID-19 fight. The ultrasound has the capability to be easily integrated into the UHWI’s data management system and can be accessed remotely.

The ultrasound machine was earmarked for a section of the intensive care unit to prevent possible cross-contamination as the hospital also treated COVID-19 cases. However, as more steps are taken to vaccinate the public and hospitalisations taper off, Dr Sundeep Shah, head of Diagnostics and Interventional Radiology, said the machine was still an urgent need in other areas of critical care.

“Ultrasound imagery is a huge tool in medicine, from maternity to the treatment of vascular conditions. And this specific model can be integrated with the hospital’s information system (HIMS), and the images can be accessed and viewed by doctors remotely as it is Wi-Fi compatible,” Shah said.

Supreme Ventures on average donates $2 billion per annum to good causes including culture, sports, arts, health and education. Through the Supreme Ventures Foundation it pumps even more money into specific areas of focus namely children in State care, education and social sustainability through micro enterprises.

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