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Diagnostic Imaging.
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Ask if teleradiology is your friend or your foe

European Perspective

By Stephen Davies, MRCP, FRCR | April 1, 2008

Teleradiology provides an intriguing snapshot of the development of radiology. Its use reflects the changing world of clinical practice, technology, and service delivery. It challenges conventional models of care and is leading to a globalization of radiology. Is this a change for better or for worse?

Teleradiology was first developed for military purposes, enabling x-ray images acquired at field units to be sent to specialist centers. Informed decisions on patient management and evacuation could be made remotely.

In the U.K., teleradiology was deployed in the late 1980s to support the transfer of neuroimaging results for immediate expert opinion. Head trauma patients, in particular, could then benefit from efficient and rapid decision making. Image transmission has generally occurred through a hub and spoke arrangement that linked neurosurgical centers (the central hub) with multiple district hospitals.

The technology was also used to link remote offshore communities with mainland hospitals. This enabled radiological opinion to be given more rapidly and maximized use of personnel. Early systems were hampered by slow transmission speeds and loss of image quality, but today massive data loads may be managed efficiently and securely. Networking between institutions with different IT systems can cause problems, but progress is being made toward vendor-independent integration.

The above suggests that teleradiology is a true friend—a friend of patients, that is. So is there a downside?

The private healthcare sector in the U.K. has recognized the commercial benefits of transmitting images for remote reporting, nationally and internationally. The traditional pattern of radiologic service delivery has consequently been challenged. Some would say that teleradiology has literally forced efficiencies within the state sector at the risk of losing imaging contracts. Radiologists have sought to affirm the importance of direct clinician contact in an effort to maintain local service delivery. Governance issues have led to double reporting and language checking, in some instances. The issue of extending double reporting beyond mammography in the public sector has also been raised. The impact of teleradiology has gone way beyond the application of a technology to facilitate rapid image transfer.

The widespread use of teleradiology may cause radiology to be viewed as a commodity rather than a mature clinical specialty. If radiology can be shipped to reporting houses, where value is placed on cost containment and reporting speed, it is little different from services purchased over the Internet. If teleradiology is breaking up effective clinical links, surely it is a foe?

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ACR’s Neiman appeals for more face time between radiologists and patients

ACR’s Neiman appeals for more face time between radiologists and patients

Opening symposium: Technology, commoditization put radiology at crossroads

Ask if teleradiology is your friend or your foe





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Radiology resident urges colleagues to participate in healthcare debate
By Alexis Shively, DO, Penn State University Milton S. Hershey Medical Center first year radiology resident , May 12, 2010

American writer Louis L’Amour once said, “To make democracy work, we must be a nation of participants, not simply observers.

A resident looks at the current ABR physics certification process; finds it well worth the effort
By Alexis Shively, DO, Penn State University Milton S. Hershey Medical Center first year radiology resident , February 22, 2010

Recently, my fellow first year residents and I met to put together our study schedule for the upcoming American Board of Radiology physics exam in September 2010.

Tort reform missing: $100 billion reward if found
Jason N. Itri, MD, PhD, University of Pennsylvania Hospital radiology resident , February 16, 2010

There has been considerable debate concerning President Obama’s healthcare reform initiative despite widespread agreement the U.S. healthcare system is in need of a significant and comprehensive overhaul.


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