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Company reflects on how mindset, not technology alone, often shapes long-term health outcomes
Deerfield Beach, Florida, 14th January 2026, ZEX PR WIRE, Life Imaging Fla is calling attention to a growing cultural shift in how people think about health, responsibility, and timing. Rather than focusing solely on medical technology or testing advancements, the company emphasizes that everyday decision-making and mindset often play a defining role in long-term well-being.

Founded in 2020 by Tom Graham after the loss of both of his parents to cancer, Life Imaging Fla emerged from a deeply personal realization. Serious illness rarely begins suddenly, yet action is often delayed until symptoms demand attention. According to national health data, 65% of Americans aged 21 and older are not up to date on at least one routine cancer screening, suggesting that avoidance and delay remain widespread even among people who feel healthy.
“Most people are taught to wait for permission when it comes to their health,” Graham said. “They wait for pain, for certainty, for a clear signal. By the time those signals appear, the conversation changes.”
Life Imaging Fla works with individuals seeking preventative heart scans and full-body imaging, often as part of a broader effort to understand their health earlier and more clearly. Since opening, the company has screened more than 100,000 people across Florida. In over 2,600 cases, heart scans identified elevated cardiovascular risk in individuals who had no prior indication of a problem.
Heart disease remains the leading cause of death in the United States, and organizations such as the American Heart Association continue to emphasize early risk identification as a key factor in prevention. Similarly, research from the National Institutes of Health shows that prevention and screening account for the majority of lives saved from several major cancers over the past 45 years, outpacing advances in treatment alone.
Despite this evidence, preventative behaviors remain inconsistent, particularly among individuals who feel well or have been told they fall outside standard risk categories. Studies from the National Cancer Institute indicate that increasing screening participation by just 10% could prevent tens of thousands of deaths, underscoring how small shifts in behavior can have outsized effects.
“What surprises people is not the technology,” Graham said. “It’s how empowering information can be. When people understand what’s happening inside their body, they approach decisions differently.”
That shift is reflected in personal accounts shared through Life Imaging reviews, where individuals frequently describe feeling more confident and engaged when speaking with their physicians after receiving screening results. Many report that having objective information changed the tone of medical conversations from passive to collaborative.
Life Imaging Fla stresses that preventative awareness does not mean excessive testing or replacing professional medical care. Instead, the company promotes informed participation, thoughtful timing, and shared decision-making.
“Good decisions compound over time,” Graham said. “Health works the same way. Small actions taken earlier often matter more than dramatic actions taken late.”
Life Imaging Fla encourages individuals to reflect on their approach to health by learning their family history, staying informed through credible medical sources, and being actively involved in routine healthcare discussions. A preventive mindset, the company notes, begins long before a diagnosis.
Disclaimer: The views, suggestions, and opinions expressed here are the sole responsibility of the experts. No Funds Spectrum journalist was involved in the writing and production of this article.
