Siemens Healthineers and NYU Langone Health Mark Strategic Alliance with Five-year Imaging and Service Agreement
• Alliance builds on 20-year relationship achieving several firsts in clinical use of MR technology
• Furthers innovation through expanded clinical use of photon-counting CT, state-of-the-art musculoskeletal and neuroimaging, and optimized AI across radiology services
• Alliance builds on 20-year relationship achieving several firsts in clinical use of MR technology
• Furthers innovation through expanded clinical use of photon-counting CT, state-of-the-art musculoskeletal and neuroimaging, and optimized AI across radiology services
Siemens Healthineers Press Release
Siemens Healthineers and NYU Langone Health have entered a five-year strategic alliance providing advanced diagnostic imaging across the NYU Langone Health network in Manhattan, Brooklyn and Long Island. The agreement covers the purchase of magnetic resonance (MR), computed tomography (CT), molecular imaging, X-ray, products, ultrasound, angiography and C arms.
The parties have also signed a five-year, $100 million integrated service management agreement to deliver vendor-agnostic routine service after business hours. Included are a dedicated service manager and a team of engineers for rapid response to critical equipment issues.
The relationship between Siemens Healthineers and NYU Langone spans two decades and has produced multiple firsts in clinical use of MR, including motion insensitive body imaging and AI-driven image reconstruction.
“Our team is constantly searching for ways to maximize productivity and improve patient care” said Michael P. Recht, MD, chair of the Department of Radiology at NYU Langone Health, and the Louis Marx Professor of Radiology. “We look forward to working closely with Siemens Healthineers in a long-term partnership in pursuit of these core goals.”
Added John Kowal, president and head of the Americas at Siemens Healthineers: “We believe that patients deserve not only the best available healthcare technology, but that those systems should be working as intended to provide convenient and efficient care. These agreements help to ensure both.”


