EGYPT AFTER REVOLUTION OF 25 JAN 2010
BIOMID LTD. can offer Job Vacancy In Cairo –Egypt
Job No.1 ( Part Time Job )
– Biomedical sales engineer. (Male & Female)
…(Dental & Medical field experience is preferred)
To work in selling Dental units & equipment.
Job No.2 ( Full Time Job )
– Biomedical Service Engineer. (Male only)
(Dental & ICU & OR field experience is preferred)
To work in Maintenance department.
Job No.3 ( Full Time Job )
– Secretary. (Female)
(English language & Computer skills is a MUST)
Executive secretary – Good Looking – Presentable Female – Good Command in English – Excellent Computer Skills – Fresh Graduate
Semiconductor producer Analog Devices Inc. (ADI) has introduced its low-noise, zero-drift operational amplifier. The ADA4528 zero-drift op amp is designed for instrumentation and medical applications that require precision over time and temperature without system calibration. The breakthrough design achieves an ultra-low integrated voltage noise of 99 nVp-p over 0.1 – 10 Hz meaning that the ADA4528 delivers a 26% lower voltage noise at 40% less power consumption than the closest competing amplifiers, according to the company. This improves system SNR (signal-to-noise ratio) and lowers the noise floor, enabling 24-bit resolution over 150 kHz in A/D converters while improving system accuracy.
This is a preview of Zero Drift Amplifier for Medical Applications:Analog Devices.
Read the full post (207 words, 2 images, estimated 50 secs reading time)
What should Biomedical Engineering Students do now. They are busy in making projects which have long names but only little bit of innovation which serves the cause of improving healthcare. If this is the case . How will the technology develop?
What the Industry is looking after now?
What shall a Biomedical Engineer do to get good jobs?
How does one win over emerging markets like Asia? This is an inevitable question asked by most leaders of medical device companies who are planning growth strategies. Let’s try answering it. Like any market, emerging markets want product innovations relevant to their local healthcare needs. Local experience is an essential aspect for achieving this.
This is a preview of “Local Healthcare R&D:The Need of the Hour ” Pulse of the Biomedical Market.
Read the full post (453 words, 1 image, estimated 1:49 mins reading time)
GE Healthcare recently unveiled two advanced cardiac-care solutions designed and developed in India for India with the aim to provide better, affordable early cardiac diagnosis. The GE MAC 600 and GE VIVID P3 devices were developed as part of GE’s healthymagination programme.
“When we launched healthymagination two years ago, our vision was to provide better health for more people at lower costs,” said John Dineen, President and CEO, GE Healthcare, as he unveiled the ultrasound systems for cardiac care at Bangalore. “Through the use of powerful technology, innovation and the talent of our people, we are addressing global healthcare needs: reducing costs, increasing access and improving quality in real and relevant ways. We are tremendously proud of our initial achievements: 29 healthymagination validated products, US$700 million in research and development investment and more than 135 million lives touched in new ways in the first two years.”
This is a preview of GE Healthcare Launches low cost Cardiac solutions for India.
Read the full post (318 words, 2 images, estimated 1:16 mins reading time)
Recently I read a News article from the Mercury News about the shining Biomedical Sector, so felt like sharing it with you people.
This report had following highlights
A total of 14 biomedical companies made the valley’s list of 150 sales leaders, the fourth-highest number among the 11 sectors tracked on the list. And even though that was one company fewer than the previous year, the biomedical group’s nearly $14 billion in revenue amounted to a 13 percent increase over 2009.
This is a preview of Biomedical Sector ranked No 1 in Profit Margin among Sillicon Valley Stalwarts.
Read the full post (363 words, 1 image, estimated 1:27 mins reading time)