DiagnosticImaging Members: Login | Register
Diagnostic Imaging Recommended Medical Sites Medline Drugs

Powered by SearchMedica

 
  • Home
  • Blog
  • Conference Reports
  • Case Studies
  • Jobs
  • Product Directory
  • Voice Recognition
  • Low Dose
  • RSNA 2011
  • PET-MR

Home » Conference Reports » ECR 2006

NewsfromECR2006

ECR 2006

 


View slide show

ECR2006


 

Agfa sees sophisticated clinical integration as market differentiator

John C. Hayes
March 5, 2006

Agfa HealthCare plans to distinguish itself in a crowded IT market by providing meaningful integration of different sources of clinical data and bringing the results into clinical workflow, company officials said at the ECR.

They described a world in which the pace of data generation is increasing and clinicians are challenged to bring together more sources of information to generate better, more predictive diagnoses. Doing so will require IT systems that move beyond administrative integration to more intelligently link different sources of information.

That approach has driven Agfa's recent acquisitions of a number of companies, said Andrea Fiumicelli, COO of Agfa's HealthCare Business Group, and Marcus Ostlander, European marketing manager, in an interview with Diagnostic Imaging Friday. These acquisitions include Heartlab, a cardiology informatics company, and GWI, a German firm that has developed an electronic health record.

"Image data will need to be merged to lab data to ECG data to pathology data, so the display will be a convergence of the clinical data," Fiumicelli said. "The speed and ease of the integration will become crucial to healthcare services. Only by applying deep IT solutions will we create the overarching solution for a hospital."

Recently, Agfa introduced a new version of its Impax workstation. Version 6.0 includes the ability to draw and display data from independent clinical data archives such as a radiology reference archive produced by Amirsys, a U.S. company, as an aid to clinical decision making, Ostlander said.

"The IT tradition as well as the future of Agfa are not strictly the administrative side of IT," Fiumicelli said. "We come from the clinical data side and want to maintain this specificity. We want to leverage the clinical knowledge the company has by bringing our experience in the clinical domain to the IT domain."

He describe the administrative IT in most countries as in a replacement mode that will continue to evolve. The virgin domain is the integration of clinical data management with workflow and administrative processes.

"Clinical data integration is not just making two databases talk to each other and recognize the patient," Fiumicelli said. "If it were only that, it would be only an information workflow or IT solution. To manage departmental data means to enter content or knowledge in the clinical space. To facilitate the convergence, the meaning of the knowledge, there is a syntax integration that is easy. The area where we want to have a differentiating role is in the semantic integration of the data."

Ostlander gave the following example of this integration: A radiologist has a complex abdominal case and needs reference cases to get key impressions that can be compared with other key impressions to assure confidence in the final report. Once this was done by radiologists who turned to reference books. More sophisticated systems should do this on a workstation seamlessly.

"Technology here plus technology there plus a semantical link creates a content-, knowledge-based integration," Ostlander said.

John C. Hayes

Editor's note: Agfa HealthCare is the commercial sponsor of Diagnostic Imaging's 2006 ECR webcast.

 

Join the Conversation

Want to join the conversation? Just sign in or register today to become part of our growing, online community.





Videos

Get Windows Media Player

Watch this space for upcoming video interviews with well respected radiologists. The ability to play windows media files (WMV) is required to view these videos.

 


Zonare's newly enhanced z.one ultra

March 13, 2006
ECR Sketch

Dr. Paul Dubbins from Plymouth, U.K., is a self-confessed grumpy old man. But what he could he possibly find to complain about at ECR? This congress sketch originally appeared on ECR TV and Radio. 

View LOW bandwidth video (2.0MB)
View HIGH bandwidth video (24.9MB)
 


Zonare's newly enhanced z.one ultra

March 6, 2006
ECR TV

Novel techniques in breast imaging were discussed at Monday's special focus session. ECR TV invited the speakers to elaborate on their lectures. The presenter was Edna Astbury-Ward, MSc.

View LOW bandwidth video (2.0MB)
View HIGH bandwidth video (24.3MB)


Zonare's newly enhanced z.one ultra

March 5, 2006
ECR TV

Should prostate MR be performed by specialists or beginners? What do urologists require from radiologists? These questions and others were addressed in Sunday's ECR TV panel discussion on prostate cancer. The presenter was Edna Astbury-Ward, MSc.

View LOW bandwidth video (3.6MB)
View HIGH bandwidth video (44.2MB)


Zonare's newly enhanced z.one ultra

March 4, 2006
ECR TV

Spinal intervention came under the spotlight at Saturday's special focus session. ECR TV invited the speakers to take part in a panel discussion. Prof. Afshin Gangi from Strasbourg, France, also took part. The presenter was Edna Astbury-Ward, MSc.

View LOW bandwidth video (3.2MB)
View HIGH bandwidth video (39.6MB)


Zonare's newly enhanced z.one ultra

March 3, 2006
ECR TV

The speakers from Friday's ECR state-of-the-art symposium about imaging the myocardium share their views on this hot topic. They provide short summaries of the main points in their presentations and speculate about the future, including the potential benefits of multislice CT. The chairman of the session, Prof. Matthijs Oudkerk from Groningen in the Netherlands, joins the discussion, which is presented by ECR TV's Edna Astbury-Ward, MSc.

View LOW bandwidth video (3.6MB)
View HIGH bandwidth video (45.3MB)


Zonare's newly enhanced z.one ultra

March 1, 2006
AGFA

Message from AGFA: Radiology at work


View LOW bandwidth AGFA video (0.4MB)
View HIGH bandwidth AGFA video (4.5MB)

What'sNewonDiagnoticImaging.com


So, Imaging Technologist, You Want to Be Considered a Medical Professional
February 10, 2012
MRI Technique Shows Success of MS Drug Copaxone
February 9, 2012
Early CT Angiography Identifies Recurrent Stroke Risk
February 9, 2012
Podcast: Using MRI in the Operating Room
February 8, 2012
PET with FDG May Predict Outcomes in Triple-Negative Breast Cancer
February 8, 2012



CancerNetwork | CME LLC | ConsultantLive | Diagnostic Imaging | Musculoskeletal Network | OBGYN.net | PediatricsConsultantLive |
Physicians Practice | Psychiatric Times | SearchMedica | Medical Resources

© 1996 - 2012 UBM Medica LLC, a UBM company
Privacy Statement - Terms of Service - Advertising Information - Editorial Policy Statement - UBM Medica Network Privacy Policy