IBM 5880
The IBM 5880, also known as the IBM 5880 Electrocardiograph System, is a computerized electrocardiograph and diagnostic tool. It was developed by IBM scientist Ray Bonner in the early 1970s and announced in 1978.
The IBM 5880 was designed to analyze electrocardiograms, measurements of the electrical activity of the heart, and provide diagnostic advice to the same standards as a cardiologist. Similar programs already ran on mainframe computers, but the 5880 was the first version that could be placed in a cart and taken into hospital conditions.
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The IBM 5880 was not well received by doctors who at the time were being paid to read an ekgs. It was a threat to their income. Now the tech operating the machine could instantly see if there was a problem with the patient. The machine also had the ability to store and print ekgs. This presented a problem as to what was a copy and what was the original.