Oklahoma State University Medical Center in Tulsa has acquired OSU Mobile Cardiology, a mobile unit that will bring cardiology diagnostic services to underserved and rural communities in Oklahoma, according to a hospital news release.
OSU Medical Center and OSU Center for Health Sciences will run the mobile unit, which offers abdominal ultrasound, carotid duplex ultrasound, echocardiogram exercise stress testing, lower extremity duplex ultrasound, nuclear stress testing, nuclear medicine diagnostic studies and venous Doppler ultrasound.
The OSU Mobile Cardiology unit is funded by a grant from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, a challenge grant from the A.R. and Marylouise Tandy Foundation and a contribution from The Anne and Henry Zarrow Foundation.
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OSU Medical Center and OSU Center for Health Sciences will run the mobile unit, which offers abdominal ultrasound, carotid duplex ultrasound, echocardiogram exercise stress testing, lower extremity duplex ultrasound, nuclear stress testing, nuclear medicine diagnostic studies and venous Doppler ultrasound.
The OSU Mobile Cardiology unit is funded by a grant from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, a challenge grant from the A.R. and Marylouise Tandy Foundation and a contribution from The Anne and Henry Zarrow Foundation.
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