Grid Medical Archive
Optimize access and storage of medical images and other healthcare data across multiple sites or within a single facility
As the volume of digital images and reference data in the healthcare and pharmaceutical industries continues to explode, the need for storage is exploding right along with it. In fact, the demand for storage of fixed content-defined as healthcare or research data that has to be accessed frequently, is retained for long periods of time and cannot be changed-is growing exponentially.
The Grid Medical Archive Solution is a grid-powered ILM storage solution specifically designed to address this growth. Its advanced content addressable storage and hierarchical storage management functions help ensure the most optimal use, while its real-time failover capabilities make any planned or unplanned downtime transparent to users and their applications. Through the use of advanced virtualization and encryption technologies, Grid Medical Archive Solution can help ensure that critical patient and research data remains protected regardless of its age, location, application source or storage tier. And with Grid Medical Archive Solution's centralized administration and automation functions, even large, complex, distributed archives can be managed with a fraction of the effort required today.
Grid Medical Archive Solution is sold in preconfigured, prepackaged hardware, software and services bundles designed to reduce implementation time and get your archive up and running quickly.
By deploying Grid Medical Archive Solution, organizations can:
- Improve application uptime and reliability
- Protects data for its lifetime using digital signatures and advanced self-healing technologies
- Optimize storage costs across the enterprise
- Leverage existing storage assets and investments
- Deploy an open, scalable and flexible enterprise storage platform
- Automate key administration functions and hardware-related data migrations
- Lower your overall storage total cost of ownership.
- Easily scales from single terabytes to petabytes across a local area network (LAN) or wide area network (WAN)

