Vista Primary Care aims to bring its 21st-century diagnostic and preventive health services to people across Ireland, and it's relying on AirSpeed Telecom to help fulfil its vision.
In Ireland, the future of healthcare probably looks a lot like Vista Primary Care. Kildare-based Vista is Ireland's first primary-care campus, located just meters from Naas General Hospital. Its chief tenant is K-Doc, a group of general practitioners serving more than 240,000 patients. The EUR25 million centre boasts the kind of scanning and diagnostic equipment which was previously only available in a hospital setting, and which includes one of the world's few 4D CT scanners.
Vista offers ophthalmology, orthopaedic, pharmacy and medical imaging services, including diagnostic services like general X-ray, ultrasound, MRI and CT. Darragh Kettle, Commercial Manager for Vista, is emphatic about the importance of medical imaging to the venture.
"Medical imaging is a principal component of the whole project," Darragh said. "But it's also the highest risk. A key to our success is our ability to get images to any point in the country, and that was going to be difficult using traditional broadband."
Diagnostic imagery produced by Vista is analysed by radiologists and other specialists who then produce reports, including selected images, which can be viewed by the referring physicians or hospitals over a secure web interface. The radiologists' report "packages" are not bandwidth intensive, but the original diagnostic images are -- a single 4D scan may contain 8,000 images totalling 14GB. If the radiologists viewing the original images are not based at Vista, all files need to be transmitted to them, wherever they may be in Ireland.
This is the heavy-duty telecommunications challenge Vista brought to the market. The solution was licensed wireless high bandwidth connectivity from AirSpeed Telecom.
High-performance medical imaging demands high bandwidth
After considering fibre and other fixed line options, Darragh said Vista quickly opted for a licensed wireless network delivered as a managed service by AirSpeed Telecom.
AirSpeed's licensed wireless networks use microwave radio technology to deliver highly secure, reliable connectivity at extremely high bandwidth anywhere in Ireland, including rural regions not currently served by broadband or connected by fibre.
"We looked at fixed line and fibre, but we stopped pursuing anybody else because AirSpeed offered something unique -- they can get us to any hospital within the M50 without a cable and without relying on any other third-party technology or provider," Darragh explains. "We also need to reach hospitals anywhere in Ireland, and they showed a strong understanding of how to get large amounts of data across the country to a lot of different locations. Wherever we wanted to go, AirSpeed made a commitment to put in place the resources to get us there."
A dedicated service delivers for Vista:
Karl Chadburn
