Screening

Diagnostic screening programs help catch cancer, abnormalities or other diseases before they reach an advanced stage, saving lives and healthcare costs. Screening programs include, lung, breast, prostate, and cervical cancer, among many others.

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Carestream Demonstrates Support for Clinical Collaboration Workflows at 2016 SIIM Conference

ROCHESTER, N.Y., May 24 — Carestream will demonstrate its ability to support   deconstructed and unified enterprise imaging platforms at the 2016 SIIM (Society for Imaging Informatics in Medicine) conference being held June 29-July 1 in Portland. Carestream’s standards-based, modular platform offers interoperability that allows users to choose one or multiple modules to satisfy their enterprise imaging needs. 

Radiology can’t live without PACS, but will relationships survive the isolation?

PACS technology has worked wonders improving efficiency in radiology, but it’s doing a number on radiologists’ relationships with people whose work falls within, or reaches into, the imaging circle. 

Medtronic cleared to market MRI-compatible brain shunt

The FDA has given Medtronic the go-ahead to market an MRI-compatible product in their line of valves and shunts for patients with hydrocephalus and cerebrospinal fluid disorders, many of whom regularly require MR scans.

Two rads ruminate on the changing of the ‘medical gaze’ through history

Radiologists Benjamin Gray, MD, and Richard Gunderman, MD, PhD, have laid out an intriguing synthesis of their contemplations on their profession with the thoughts of the French historian, philosopher and critic of modernity Michel Foucault (1926–1984).

Charitable rads bring medical imaging to the far reaches of the developing world

Lacking hospitals, rural villagers in India needed a mobile imaging clinic to screen women for cancers and osteoporosis. Absent a medical school, the islanders of Cape Verde off the coast of Africa needed trained radiologists and techs to show people how to take and read x-rays. 

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Breast cancer news round-up: New screening research + another state passes density legislation

It’s been a busy week in the world of breast cancer screening research, with study results increasing our collective understanding of how best to use certain screening modalities and imaging protocols, as well as newly enacted legislation at the state level requiring women to be notified of potential risks related to dense breast tissues.

Elevated cancer risk for rad techs working with interventional fluoroscopy

Compared with radiologic technologists who have never performed fluoroscopically guided interventional procedures, those who have done so seem to be at markedly increased risk of dying from brain cancer and at moderately increased risk of developing melanoma and breast cancer.

Oklahoma governor signs breast density notification bill into law

Oklahoma has joined an increasing number of states with breast density reporting laws with the signing of House Bill 2601, which requires healthcare facilities to include density information on mammography reports and notify women with dense breasts of potential cancer risks.

Around the web

Positron, a New York-based nuclear imaging company, will now provide Upbeat Cardiology Solutions with advanced PET/CT systems and services. 

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.