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 »

Diagnostic Imaging. Vol. 30 No. 11
Pages: 1  2  
Next
 

Strategies can limit imaging fungibility


Bundling, branding, and segmentation and customization will help radiologists

By Bruce Reiner, M.D. | November 1, 2008
Dr. Reiner is director of research at the Baltimore VA Medical Center in Maryland.

Whether we would like to admit it or not, medical imaging is slowly on its way to becoming a commodity, which has been defined by Wikipedia as "anything for which there is a demand, but which is supplied without qualitative differentiation across a given market."

In the original, simplified sense, commodities are described as things of value (e.g., pork bellies, oil) that are produced in large quantities by multiple manufacturers, the products of which are considered equivalent. A critical factor in determining what is a commodity is the consumer's perception that the products or services being defined are of uniform quality. When the products and/or services provided by one company are perceived to be supplied equally well by other companies, then that product and/or service becomes undifferentiated and commoditization occurs. Cost becomes the principal factor in determining supplier selection.

Commoditization occurs as a goods or services market loses differentiation across its supply base, often by the diffusion of the intellectual capital necessary to acquire or produce it efficiently. Relevant examples in the current marketplace include generic pharmaceuticals and silicon chips, which at one time in their life cycles justified a premium price within the market but over time lost their differentiation and pricing power. Globalization, increased information exchange, and technological developments are rapidly accelerating the trend toward commoditization.

While many within the medical imaging community may not see the direct relevance of this trend, I believe that the commoditization of medical imaging, if left to its own devices, is inevitable. As medical imaging service providers strive to maximize operational efficiency through an assembly line approach and traditional geographic boundaries disintegrate, service deliverables come to be measured in quantitative terms. The qualitative differentiators that have been the historic main-stay and protective force against commoditization become lost.

Consumers of these services begin to view medical imaging service providers as interchangeable parts providing comparable service. As a result, the provider selection begins to focus more on price, eventually leading to "survival of the cheapest."

CREATING THE SOLUTION

A number of traditional marketing strategies are used in an attempt to counteract commoditization, including branding, segmentation and customization, and bundling. The major medical imaging technology vendors, for example, have committed vast resources to creating the perception in the marketplace that their products are of superior quality (branding), can be customized to the specific needs of individual customers (segmentation and customization), and can be combined in tandem with other products/services to create an all-inclusive, comprehensive solution (bundling).

The end goal is to create the perception that the supplier has created added value for its customers, thereby differentiating the supplier from its competitors and providing justification for commanding a higher price.

While medical imaging product providers (vendors) have used these marketing strategies for years, few service providers have engaged in this practice. This reluctance may in part stem from the stigma associated with proactive medical advertisement, as well as the economic and geographic protection typically afforded to the medical imaging service community.

A traditional hospital-based radiology group is offered exclusivity for all medical imaging studies performed within the institution, thereby creating a monopoly on professional service delivery. At the same time, the analog radiology practice offers limited portability of medical imaging exams, which serves as a relative deterrent to seeking professional services outside of the host institution.

With the expansion of radiology practice outside of hospitals, the transition to digital imaging, and the expansion of teleradiology across geographic boundaries, however, many of these protective barriers have completely disintegrated. As a result, both technical and professional medical imaging service providers are faced with new challenges that threaten the commoditization of the industry.

The solution to this commoditization threat lies in the ability of the medical imaging community to shift the focus from quantitative to qualitative differentiation and to create a pro-active mechanism for objective data-driven analysis using quality-oriented metrics. These metrics need to be comprehensive in nature (bundling), address the individual priorities of different customer groups (segmentation and customization), and create an objective means of product/service differentiation (branding).

DIFFERENT PRIORITIES

The table lists some of the different priorities of individual stakeholders and consumers of medical imaging services. While all of the priorities listed are of importance to the individual and collective stakeholders, the relative importance of these priorities may differ, depending upon each individual's perspective. The one denominator common to them all is diagnostic accuracy, which in the end is the principal determinant of clinical outcomes analysis, the proverbial holy grail of all medical providers.

If product or service suppliers can demonstrate in objective and unequivocal terms that they can achieve improved clinical outcomes compared with their competitors, then price differential becomes moot and quality effectively eliminates all threats of commoditization.

Clinicians have long bemoaned the inconsistency and ambiguity within traditional radiology reporting and communication, which have changed little in form and content over the past century despite dramatic technological advances. The opportunity for radiologists to add value in the eyes of their clinical colleagues largely resides in the radiology report. In order to create objective and reproducible quality-oriented metrics tied to the radiology report, a number of prerequisites must first take place to facilitate large-scale radiology report data min-ing. These include the creation of structured input data (using a standardized lexicon such as RadLex), the ability to pool multiple nonproprietary database repositories (i.e., meta-analysis), and the capability to objectively analyze these data relative to reference peer groups.

The data analyzed could include any number of report elements perceived to be of importance to the referring clinician group, including timeliness and consistency of critical results communication and reporting of diagnostic confidence, follow-up recommendations, and clinical significance tied to individual pathologic findings. These measures would not only provide an objective means of assessing radiologist report performance but can also be used by service providers (radiologists) to en-hance educational and training efforts, along with new technology development by product providers (vendors).

The primary focus of radiology and hospital administrators is often predicated on operational efficiency measures such as report turnaround time, scheduling backlog, retake rates, and image quality. Many of these time-stamped measures can be directly derived from data residing in existing information system technologies (HIS, RIS, PACS) and modalities.

While assessment of image quality is currently done in a somewhat idiosyncratic and subjective fashion, efforts are under way to develop soft-ware integrated into the modality, RIS, and PACS that would automate and objectify the quality assurance process. This would create an objective and reproducible means to track retake rates and image quality, while providing valuable feedback to both service and product providers. This would, in effect, become an iterative process, in which the quality-oriented data would provide objective feed-back and be used to continuously drive both operational efficiency and image quality, along with the supporting technologies.

While multiple quality indicators are of high importance to the patient population, perhaps the most important priority is safety. Within the delivery of medical imaging services, safety measures would consist of individual and collective radiation dose monitoring, utilization review, and adverse outcomes (e.g., contrast reaction) monitoring.

Radiation dose optimization is a particularly high priority within certain patient populations (e.g., pediatric, oncology) that is taking on greater importance as more patients access the Internet for medical information and become aware of radiation as a carcinogen.

The ability to prospectively record, track, and analyze individual and collective radiation dose exposures currently exists, but these steps are not routinely being performed. This creates an excellent opportunity for both imaging service providers and imaging product manufacturers to capitalize on the gap by creating an important value-added service. At the same time, service providers have the capability of proactively reducing radiation dose exposure through optimization of the acquisition parameters and utilization of state-of-the-art technology (hardware and software).

By prospectively tracking and analyzing these radiation dose data, service providers could improve patient safety and be differentiated based on objective radiation dose measures.

Pages: 1  2  
Next
 

Join the Conversation

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






TopicIndex

 

ACOs
Cardiac
Case Studies
Colonography
CT
Digital X-ray
Direct Radiography
Elastography
Low-Dose Modalities
Meaningful Use
Molecular Imaging
MRI
 

 

Nuclear
PACS
PET/CT
PET/MR
Practice Management
RIS
Teleradiology
Ultrasound Imaging
Vendors
Voice Recognition
Women's Imaging
All Topics
 


SponsoredResources


OptumInsight
Acadiana Computer Systems, Inc. gains a 100% ROI on their radiology billing


Key Equipment Finance
Michiana Hematology Oncology Success Story


Barco
Multi-modality breast imaging using RapidFrame™ technology


Siemens
3D Ultrasound of the Breast


Ziosoft, Inc.
PhyZiodynamic Solutions: Applying Supercomputing to Patient Care


Siemens
Easy Guide to Low Dose


Medrad
Improving Clinical Outcomes and Workflow
Toshiba America Medical Systems
Minimizing dose, sedation in pediatric CT

 

View All

 


FromPhysiciansPractice

'What They Should Really Teach in Medical School'
Julie Schopps, MD , February 6, 2012
The North Carolina-based pediatrician weighs in on why she thinks the real learning doesn't take place until students are out of the classroom.
Improve EHR Systems by Rethinking Medical Billing
Daniel Essin, MA, MD, February 6, 2012
Separating billing-related data from other clinical documentation and transmitting it to a billing system is not difficult …no matter how the charting is done.
Keeping Your Medical Practice’s Accounts Receivable on Track
P.J. Cloud-Moulds, February 4, 2012
Here are the minimum reports you should be running to keep an eye on your practices A/R.
Healthcare Providers Play Crucial Role in Helping Victims of Abuse
Stephen Hanson, PA-C , February 3, 2012
I would urge each and every one of you to be familiar with the warning signs of abuse, and the resources available to you all as healthcare providers.
Protecting Your Medical Practice's Data
Marisa Torrieri, February 3, 2012
Here's the scoop on how to implement a good data-backup plan at your office.
  • On This Site
  • Most Emailed
  • On This Topic

MostPopular

  • Whole-breast ultrasound brings significant screening benefits

    JAN 15 2010 DIAGNOSTIC IMAGING ASIA PACIFIC READ >>

  • CNN Investigation Targets Radiology Board Exam Cheating

    JAN 13 2012 READ >>

  • As teleradiology evolves, it changes dramatically, plays growing role in practice

    DEC 15 2010 DIAGNOSTIC IMAGING READ >>

  • Delayed side effects persist in IV iodinated contrast media

    MAY 28 2009 DIAGNOSTIC IMAGING EUROPE READ >>

  • Mucinous Adenocarcinoma of Stomach

    JAN 9 2012 READ >>

MostPopular

  • CNN Investigation Targets Radiology Board Exam Cheating

    JAN 13 2012 READ >>

  • Telemammography Taking Hold

    JAN 24 2012 READ >>

  • Riverain’s Chest X-Ray Comparison Tool Gets FDA Nod

    JAN 11 2012 READ >>

  • Podcast: Implementing a Hybrid PET/MR System

    JAN 30 2012 READ >>

  • Taking Medical Image Sharing to the Cloud

    JAN 19 2012 READ >>

MostPopular

  • CNN Investigation Targets Radiology Board Exam Cheating

    JAN 13 2012 READ >>

  • Radiology Comic: Doctors Cheating

    JAN 31 2012 READ >>

  • CNN Look at Radiology Exam "Cheating" Misses the Mark

    JAN 24 2012 READ >>

  • Columbus Radiology Launches Imaging Ordering App

    JAN 19 2012 READ >>

  • Radiology Comic: Bad Apple

    JAN 17 2012 READ >>



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