It is a full-time job just to follow medical applications for 3D printing, as there are so many promising stories that focus on how 3D printing is becoming more influential among surgeons and in hospital settings. As yet another example of 3D printing’s growing medical influence, Materialise announces that it has signed an agreement with China’s largest cardiovascular hospital to provide 3D printed clinical planning tools to Fu Wai Hospital, located in Beijing, via the opening of a new multidisciplinary 3D printing center.
Leuven, Belgium-based Materialise is a pioneer in 3D printing software and services, providing Additive Manufacturing (AM) to healthcare, aerospace, art/design, automotive, and consumer products industries. Since 1990, Materialise has been involved in
Materialise’s Board Chairman, Peter Leys, summarizes the benefits of this partnership:
“Materialise highly anticipates working closely together with Fuwai Hospital, and Chinese regulatory authorities, to enable doctors and patients to benefit from 3D Printed heart models. Around the world, these heart models have already proven invaluable for the preparation of complex interventions, thereby improving outcomes and in many cases, saving lives. This is especially true for young babies born with heart defects due to the complexity that comes with treating patients so young and delicate.”
Dr. Hu Shenshou is the President of Fu Wai Hospital, and he acknowledges that this agreement with Materialise is a game-changer for the quality of medical services that Fu Wai is dedicated to providing. Dr. Shenshou also acknowledges that the hospital will serve as an example of the benefits of using 3D printed heart models to the rest of the international cardiovascular medical community.
“We appreciate the opportunity to work with a company that has 25 years of experience in medical 3D Printing as they help us navigate opportunities and achieve medical 3D Printing goals in a safe, economical and sustainable way,” says Dr. Shenshou. “With this collaboration, Fuwai Hospital will become China’s leading center for 3D printed heart model education, spreading knowledge of the technology and how it can be used by surgeons to the benefit of the Chinese public.”
This type of an agreement also bodes well for international relations. A delegation of Belgian government officials, including the
3D printing brings people together in more ways than one, as the technology promises rapid medical advances with new applications, while more cooperative international relations are facilitated through collaborations such as this one between Materialise and China’s Fu Wai Hospital.
Let us know your thoughts on this latest agreement in the Materialise to Open Chinese 3D Printing Center forum thread over at 3DPB.com.