How can hospitals improve the quality of wound monitoring? How can medical photography become structured, traceable, and truly exploitable clinical data?
These are the questions Matis Ringdal, CEO of Pixacare, addressed at the CHU HealthTech Connexion Day 2025, speaking before a panel of hospital directors and senior healthcare executives.
A Reality Still Common Across Healthcare Facilities
In many hospital departments, wound documentation remains fragmented — photos taken on personal smartphones, disconnected from the patient record, impossible to compare over time or leverage at department or hospital level.
As healthcare institutions accelerate their digital transformation, structuring this data has become a strategic priority.
Why Standardized Documentation Changes Everything
Structured clinical documentation improves wound healing follow-up, strengthens care team coordination, and supports medical-economic performance management. It also meets the growing traceability requirements built into modern patient record standards.
What Matis Ringdal Presented at CHU HealthTech Connexion Day
In this talk, he walks through how Pixacare is reshaping clinical documentation practices across hospital settings.
Securing Medical Photography
Moving images out of personal smartphones and into a compliant, secure environment — directly linked to the patient record.
Structuring Wound Documentation
Standardizing image capture and clinical data organization within the hospital information system.
Turning Images into Decision-Ready Data
Making every photograph an exploitable data point — for wound healing tracking, care team coordination, and department-level performance monitoring.
Clinical Documentation as a Care Infrastructure
Medical photography should no longer be a simple memory aid. Structured and integrated into the hospital information system, it becomes a full infrastructure — serving care quality, traceability, and team performance.
Watch the full presentation in the video below.
Références
Video credit: CHU Healthtech Connexion Day



