Enterprise Imaging

Enterprise imaging brings together all imaging exams, patient data and reports from across a healthcare system into one location to aid efficiency and economy of scale for data storage. This enables immediate access to images and reports any clinical user of the electronic medical record (EMR) across a healthcare system, regardless of location. Enterprise imaging (EI) systems replace the former system of using a variety of disparate, siloed picture archiving and communication systems (PACS), radiology information systems (RIS), and a variety of separate, dedicated workstations and logins to view or post-process different imaging modalities. Often these siloed systems cannot interoperate and cannot easily be connected. Web-based EI systems are becoming the standard across most healthcare systems to incorporate not only radiology, but also cardiology (CVIS), pathology and dozens of other departments to centralize all patient data into one cloud-based data storage and data management system.

Digital Images Meet the Law

Among the legal considerations of dealing with digital images are HIPAA, how to handle image manipulation and storage and contractual specifications and warranties to safeguard the transition to digital.

The ABCs of Teleradiology Quality Control

How do you get the images - often data-intensive multislice CT studies - from here to there and back fast, securely and accurately?

Integrated RIS-PACS

Allowing RIS and PACS to speak with each other, seamlessly, is a combination of art and science.

Analog to Digital: The Role of the Film Digitizer

X-ray film digitizers hooked to DICOM networks are allowing better flow of images to caregivers.

Viewing Images in the OR

A combination of PACS, color and monochrome displays and image-guided surgery systems is boosting intraoperative image viewing and bringing better surgical outcomes.

Web Enabled: Distributing Images to Referring Physicians

Thanks to web-enabled PACS, referring physicians are gaining fast access to images and streamlining overall patient care.

Integrating HIS & LIS: Hurdles to Overcome

The key to HIS and LIS integration is a combination of HL7, LOINC and interface engines coupled with smart IT decisions.

Managing Images in the Pathology Department

Digital images are moving into the pathology lab as are new methods of managing them electronically in pathology reports and EMRs.

Around the web

The nuclear imaging isotope shortage of molybdenum-99 may be over now that the sidelined reactor is restarting. ASNC's president says PET and new SPECT technologies helped cardiac imaging labs better weather the storm.

CMS has more than doubled the CCTA payment rate from $175 to $357.13. The move, expected to have a significant impact on the utilization of cardiac CT, received immediate praise from imaging specialists.

The newly cleared offering, AutoChamber, was designed with opportunistic screening in mind. It can evaluate many different kinds of CT images, including those originally gathered to screen patients for lung cancer. 

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