Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
BoneStation is DXA/BMD reporting and workflow software for bone density developed by Cardea Technology. It is designed for organizations that perform DXA exams, including radiology, endocrinology, rheumatology, women’s health, and osteoporosis centers. Delivered as a web application, it lets physicians review bone density scans, patient questionnaires, and historical data in a browser, then generate reports that comply with ISCD and NOF standards.
The product workflow is fairly straightforward: a DXA device sends scans into BoneStation, the system presents the exam in the web interface, patient history is collected through electronic questionnaires—typically for FRAX—and physicians review the images and data before creating a BMD report. The system can display historical scan data and images, reducing errors caused by manually entering T-score, Z-score, BMD, BMC, and similar data. On the workflow side, it can track exam status, such as pending review, on hold, and reviewed, while supporting division of work across multiple DXA devices and multiple interpreting physicians. Integration is a major focus: the site states support for GE and Hologic bone densitometers, integration with RIS, EMR, HIS, and PACS, with Epic and Cerner mentioned as examples. Reports can be distributed via print, fax, HL7, or portal.
The public pages do not disclose plans, pricing, a free version, or trial information, nor do they specify payment methods. Deployment is clearly described as web-based, with no desktop application required on physicians’ workstations, but it is not stated whether this is vendor-hosted cloud, on-premises hospital deployment, or a hybrid model. On security, only medical standards-related capabilities are mentioned, such as DICOM and HL7, plus ISCD/NOF-compliant reporting. Details such as HIPAA, encryption, audit logs, and access control are not disclosed.
Its strengths are its focus on a vertical clinical use case, combining DXA reporting, FRAX, historical comparison, standardized rules, and healthcare system integration. This can provide clear efficiency gains for busy sites or locations with multiple DXA devices. The downside is that the publicly available information is incomplete, especially around pricing, security compliance, permission management, APIs, and implementation support. Its scope is also relatively narrow: it is not a general-purpose PACS or general reporting platform.
BoneStation is best suited to bone density centers or hospital departments that already use GE/Hologic DXA devices and want to reduce manual data entry while improving report consistency. Access from mainland China, payment options, and localized support are unknown. Cross-border handling of medical data and integration with in-hospital systems would also need to be evaluated separately. In China, potential alternatives may include bone density reporting modules from local PACS/RIS/EMR vendors or medical imaging IT providers.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on bonestation.com official site.
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