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Home » Topics » Informatics and Pacs

Informatics and PACS

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Podcast: PACS Implementation at Broward General
Broward General Hospital, part of Broward Health in South Florida, recently completed the implementation of a new system, the iSite PACS from Philips. For this podcast, Diagnostic Imaging spoke with Dr. David Ring, medical director of radiology services for Broward Health and president of North Broward Radiologists, PA, about that transition.

 

PACS Market Swings Toward Upgrades and Replacements 
New buyers of PAC systems represent only a small minority of customers, according to IMV Medical Information Division. The need to upgrade or replace systems is the primary driver in the PACS marketplace, with the lion’s share of purchases going for current-system upgrades.

 

Content-driven PACS May Guide Future Diagnoses 
Efforts to interconnect information systems raise the possibility that different experiences from multiple sites might be pooled and the practice of medicine made better through a kind of collective wisdom. At the ISCT symposium, Sandy Napel, PhD, a Stanford professor of radiology and codirector of the Radiology 3D Laboratory, examined how diagnoses made on some patients might help clarify whether the same diagnoses apply to others.

 

2D PACS Has Had Its Day in the Sun, Now 3D PACS Is Moving In 
For the past 15 years, most PACS have performed the basic tasks of taking in images, archiving them, sending them to workstations for display, and hopefully not losing them. Over time, as CT scanners were able to slice thinner and thinner sections of the body, isometric data sets became available and the voxel (volume element) entered the vocabulary of medical imaging. It soon became apparent that new possibilities in manipulating the data to produce multiplanar reformations and maximum intensity projections, as well as volume and surface renderings, could be realized.

 


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RADSpa- A Cloud based Teleradiology workflow
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Read about PACS in Aunt Minnie

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Interviewed at RSNA 2011, Paul Chang, MD, explains that radiology practices should adopt business analytics and key performance indicators.

 

LatestFeatures


Diagnostic Imaging. Vol. 32 No. 12
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As teleradiology evolves, it changes dramatically, plays growing role in practice

December 15, 2010

Editor's note: Over the past couple of months we've watched the evolving world of teleradiology and thought a way to capture some of its features would be a series of vignettes written by those most involved.

The writers of these vignettes, all of them commissioned before the acquisition of NightHawk by Virtual Radiologic, were asked to answer two questions: How has teleradiology changed over the past decade, and what impact has it had on the practice of radiology? Not all stuck precisely to the format, but all provided interesting answers that will give you a sense of how differently teleradiology is being viewed, even among its most active practitioners.

—John C. Hayes

TELERADIOLOGY HAS MOVED FROM ADJUNCT TO ESSENTIAL ELEMENT OF PRACTICE

Teleradiology has morphed over the last decade, from an adjunct to the practice of radiology to an essential practice- enhancing technology for groups large and small.

For large practices, it has facilitated the ability to provide subspecialty radiology coverage to a large geographic footprint. In addition to providing a higher quality subspecialty interpretation within a practice or group of practices, teleradiology has also supplied a tool to help hospitals and radiologists practice more efficiently, resulting in timelier subspecialty imaging coverage. For the small practice, teleradiology is now more than an adjunctive tool facilitating night call coverage; it is a tool to tap into a subspecialty resource whenever there is a need.

Teleradiology’s decade-long impact on the medical landscape is multifactorial. It has facilitated subspecialty coverage of radiology practice landscapes unachievable in an analog world. It has made subspecialty reads increasingly possible around the clock and has allowed radiologists to focus on the development of subspecialty expertise within a practice by delivering imaging studies regardless of the patient location. Most important, teleradiology has helped radiologists keep the patient first in delivering high-quality service to all patients under their care, at that moment, regardless of geographic location within a practice envelope.

Arl Van Moore, M.D., FACR
President, Charlotte Radiology,
Charlotte, NC


Teleradiology changes reflect technology, market shifts

The evolution of our teleradiology practice reflects changes for radiology practices in general. Advanced Medical Imaging Consultants (AMIC), the teleradiology group in which we are partners, has a unique twist on teleradiology. On the professional side, we offer a full-service, subspecialized radiology group to hospitals, imaging centers, and clinics in Colorado, Wyoming, and Nebraska. We also supply a smorgasbord of imaging IT services, from radiology IT consultation to PACS and image storage provider.

AMIC began this service over a decade ago in an effort to help sites which otherwise had trouble finding radiology coverage. Initial issues included expensive storage, low and costly bandwidth, last-mile connectivity, additional workstations, and DICOM conflicts. Reading was tightly centralized because of workstation cost and data transmission limitations. At the time, however, radiology was less specialized. A typical CT had fewer than 60 images and 50-MB digital mammograms weren’t even part of the discussion.

Data storage is now cheap and can be dispersed in a grid or a cloud, high-bandwidth and last-mile issues are less significant, and diagnostic workstations are inexpensive. These factors have allowed for dispersed reading, improved efficiency, and time shifting as options even for small groups. On the other hand, exams are significantly larger, more complex, and more numerous. As a result, advanced image processing and subspecialization have become the norm rather than the exception, and the number of stat exams as a percentage of overall volume continues to increase.

In the beginning, many sites simply appreciated consistent, high-quality coverage. Today, however, radiology is a commodity—with quality assumed—and clients focus almost entirely on cost and turnaround time. While these things are easy to quantify and certainly have some bearing, quality is more difficult to measure. A good teleradiology practice, though, will always obtain relevant priors and may spend hours on the phone discussing patients and their presentations. In today’s world of radiology, it’s attention to details such as these that makes the difference between a teleradiology company and your teleradiologist.

J. Raymond Geis, M.D.,
Medical Director, Imaging Informatics
Chris Fleener, M.D.,
Codirector, Outreach Imaging
Advanced Medical Imaging Consultants
Fort Collins, CO

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by hmied khomaj | January 11, 2011 11:02 PM EST

it is great achivment

how can i join that





VideosfromradRounds

Xbox Kinect-based radiology & medical image exploration
RadRounds - 12/2/11

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In this video, an open-source system (MITO) for a controller-free, highly interactive exploration of medical images is presented. By using a Microsoft Xbox Kinect as the only input device, the system's user interface allows users to interact at a distance through hand and arm gestures. Since the user interface is touch-free and does not require complex calibration steps, it is suitable for use in operating rooms, where non-sterilizable devices cannot be used.
iPad and Radiology - The Doctor Dalai Show Revisits iPad for Radiology
RadRounds - 7/21/10

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The Doctor Dalai Show Revisits iPad for Radiology

Source: Dr. Dalai
Amicas and GE - by Doctor Dalai
RadRounds - 1/31/10

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Amicas, as played by Doctor Dalai, talks with GE about a little comment left on Dalai's website.

Dr. Dalai's PACS Blog is one of the top radiology blogs - please visit Dr. Dalai's website @ http://doctordalai.blogspot.com/
McKesson Integrates Mammography in Existing PACS Workstation
RadRounds - 1/20/10

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McKesson features at RSNA 2009 its PACS radiology workstation, Horizon Rad Station, which offers a flexible solution to leverage investments already made in radiology PACS to serve the full-field digital mammography (FFDM) domain, alleviating the need to purchase a dedicated mammography workstation. The workstation has received FDA 510(k) clearance to offer full support for primary interpretation of digital mammography images using a traditional radiology PACS workstation.

Source: ITNTV, YouTube
Fujifilms Adds Business Intelligence to Teleradiology
RadRounds - 1/20/10

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At RSNA 2009, Fujifilm Medical Systems features its Synapse Radiology platform, which combines the intelligence of a business system, imaging science, technology and customer service to meet the needs of radiology departments. All areas are covered from RIS to PACS to Communications (Peer Review and Critical Results) to teleradiology.

Source: ITNTV, YouTube

VoicesinRadiologyBlog


The Tales of Two Telerads: Drs. Doofus and Valiant
May 18, 2012

Remember the cartoon Goofus and Gallant from Highlights? Introducing teleradiology’s version, Doofus and Valiant, with quite different approaches to their jobs.

Be Smart About Electronic Communications
May 17, 2012

Radiologists can benefit from sharing information electronically, but here are a few reminders about keeping it professional.

How an Academic Imaging Center Connects Work Flows
May 16, 2012

The drive for improved system integration and decreased turnaround time has led to a continuous analysis of procedures and a never-ending cycle of trying to get the work flow to work.

Radiologists Staring Down the Barrel
May 11, 2012

From med-mal to reimbursement, radiologists have quite a few metaphorical guns to our collective heads.

Radiology Comic: So hot!
May 7, 2012

A radiologist alone in a dark room with his computer.


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