Imaging Technology News - November/December 2008 - (Page 44) Advances In PACS Trouble in Multi-PACS Paradise Is the trouble with a multi-PACS environment the technology or the marketplace? By Mary Beth Massat Carestream Health’s new SuperPACS architecture is designed to provide an umbrella structure that communicates with existing PACS from multiple vendors to help create an efficient, enterprisewide PACS. adiology is faced with a market paradox. Even as the radiologist shortage continues, the U.S. market for medical imaging equipment is projected to grow at a compound R annual growth rate of 8.1 percent through 2012. This growth will further drive remote radiology reading and teleradiology services, which have already gained a strong foothold thanks to continued advancements in Web-based technologies. Yet, even as Web technology spurs the growth of teleradiology, many radiology practices find themselves in the midst of a new dilemma: namely, the creation of a multi-PACS reading environment. The result is an inefficient workflow. Nagy does not believe that portable media such as CDs are an answer either. “RHIOs have tried to use CDs to exchange and share data, but so often the CDs have interoperability issues. Plus, the embedded viewers on the CD still means the radiologist has to look at the images separately.” A key problem, he notes, is that there is no standard usability across different vendors’ PACS. “This environment forces the radiologist to use different user interfaces, which places a cognitive drain on the clinician,” he said. Other challenges include identifying disparate medical records for the same patient, noted Dr. Chang. “The technology exists to solve this problem, such as the master patient index,” he added. “Yet, the problem remains because there is no universal patient record identifier.” So there is a human factor for bringing together records for the same patient who may be listed differently, such as John Doe, J Doe and Jonathan Doe. “This dependence on manual association of multiple medical record number identifiers into the master patient index is a significant problem,” Dr. Chang said. Both Nagy and Dr. Chang point to existing IHE standards, such as the cross enterprise document sharing (XDS) profile for distributing electronic medical records among healthcare enterprises. Even with this profile, Dr. Chang indicates that many vendors have not yet embraced it. “There is no real incentive for current vendors to follow this,” he said. In some of the hospitals, the Roentgen Files PACS acts as the primary PACS server and communicates directly with the HIS/RIS. For all others, Dr. Hollenberg says the hospitals use a nighttime reading model, where all images, orders and relevant priors are pushed to the server as a backend or secondary system. For redundancy, Dr. Hollenberg has two Linux (UNIX/AIX) servers backing one another. “The back-end part that makes this work is synchronization of studies at the PACS level,” he said. In an effort to better synchronize studies, Jesse A. Salen, vice president of Sales and Technology for Online Radiology (Riverside, CA), implemented Centricity PACS-IW from GE Healthcare’s Dynamic Imaging Solutions Division. Salen set up a virtual private network (VPN) to each customer site so the remote reading service group could more efficiently read studies from 150 different sites. Their hospital client base ranges from rural 50beds or less hospitals to Level 1 Trauma Centers. Although sharing data in a HIPAA-compliant manner is one technical challenge, Salen says a larger issue is the fact that not all data adheres to the DICOM standard. For the 10 percent of the studies that have some proprietary data, Online Radiology uses DICOM routers and gateways to send clean data to its PACS. “The biggest challenge is consolidating and moving the data into our environment, so our radiologists have a single patient view,” Salen noted. At Renaissance Medical Imaging Associates (RIMA) (La Canada, CA), the IT staff is preparing to install Carestream Health’s new solution called SuperPACS. Andrew Deutsch, M.D., president and CEO, says that in a complex multiPACS reading environment, it is important to be able to do more than just move images around. “At this SuperPACS level, we can balance workflow and re-route studies to gain efficiencies,” said Dr. Deutsch. Each site will communicate with RIMA’s SuperPACS to create one global worklist. TRS also took over the worklist with its PACS. Says Dr. Hollenberg, “This allows us to manage workflow and maintain a high level of productivity by using one user interface.” All five radiologists in the practice read from the same worklist, regardless of where they are located. “In addition, we can QC the studies and patch multiple modality studies into one seamless presentation, including history sheets,” he explained. Reporting is also an issue. “We have to coordinate reporting, then electronically distribute that final report back to the referring physicians,” said Dr. Deutsch. RIMA reads for five hospitals, owns and Maniac PACS You would think that the existence of search engines such as Google with the ability to aggregate an infinite amount of data would imply that sophisticated data management would be ubiquitous. But the medical industry defies this logic. On the contrary, in the PACS arena, radiology departments are struggling to streamline the data needed to complete a patient report. A large part of the challenge is gathering images from disparate PACS. A practice that reads off a different PACS client for each site they read for is referred to as ‘maniac’ PACS, according to Paul Nagy, Ph.D., associate professor, diagnostic radiology and nuclear medicine, University of Maryland Medical Center. “If you combine information from multiple, separate institutions onto the same PACS, you run into another problem. There is a significant amount of back-end work needed when importing to correct the data, such as matching to the medical record number for relevant priors, just so the radiologist can begin reading and compare them side-by-side,” said Nagy. He estimates the time to curate outside studies could easily run as high as 15-20 minutes to import a study from an outside institution. This is compounded by the fact that a patient may have relevant priors at different institutions within the same health system, says Paul Chang, M.D., professor and vice-chairman, Radiology Informatics at the University of Chicago Pritzker School of Medicine and medical director, Enterprise Imaging, University of Chicago Hospitals. Frequently in a multi-institution system, there is no single archive or database, and the same patient may be represented by a different medical record number at each site. Often, radiologists navigate through patient data on different workstations and Web clients, each with a different user interface. “Yet the radiologist requires a single presentation for a comprehensive patient view to read and report each study,” said Dr. Chang. 44 | ITN | Nov/Dec 2008 | ITNonline.net Making Multi-PACS Work Even with all the challenges confronting radiology practices reading for multiple sites with different PACS, several groups are finding some success. Yet, the common thread is that each site had to implement their own PACS for an efficient workflow model that enables the radiologist to read and report from a single workstation. Five years ago, Henry Hollenberg, M.D., and a partner at Total Radiology Solutions (TRS) recognized the solution to reading studies for multiple hospitals with disparate PACS was to bring all the data together. He worked with BRIT Systems and the company’s Roentgen Files PACS to route all studies from 10 small- to medium-sized hospitals into a Linux (UNIX/AIX) server driving BRIT’s Linux Reading Workstation. At each hospital, the modalities, HIS and RIS all communicate directly with the Linux (UNIX/AIX) server, which he calls the “traffic cop.” This “traffic cop” provides features to ensure uniqueness of the data and labels it so the PACS knows which facility it came from and where to return the radiology report. http://www.ITNonline.net
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Image Technology News - November 2008 Image Technology News - November 2008 Contents RSNA CT Systems Imaging An Image is Worth a Thousand Words Ultrasound Systems MBI Takes on FFDM Trouble in Multi-PACS Paradise When is Appropriateness Criteria Appropriate? RIS/PACS in a Web 2.0 World Digital Mammography Helps Center Continue its Commitment to the Best in Patient-Focused Breast Cancer Cardiovascular Imaging Systems PARCA Extends Expertise to World PACS Market Image Technology News - November 2008 Image Technology News - November 2008 - Image Technology News - November 2008 (Page 1) Image Technology News - November 2008 - Image Technology News - November 2008 (Page 2) Image Technology News - November 2008 - Image Technology News - November 2008 (Page 3) Image Technology News - November 2008 - Contents (Page 4) Image Technology News - November 2008 - Contents (Page 5) Image Technology News - November 2008 - RSNA (Page 6) Image Technology News - November 2008 - RSNA (Page 7) Image Technology News - November 2008 - RSNA (Page 8) Image Technology News - November 2008 - RSNA (Page 9) Image Technology News - November 2008 - RSNA (Page 10) Image Technology News - November 2008 - RSNA (Page 11) Image Technology News - November 2008 - RSNA (Page 12) Image Technology News - November 2008 - RSNA (Page 13) Image Technology News - November 2008 - RSNA (Page 14) Image Technology News - November 2008 - RSNA (Page 15) Image Technology News - November 2008 - RSNA (Page 16) Image Technology News - November 2008 - CT Systems (Page 17) Image Technology News - November 2008 - CT Systems (Page 18) Image Technology News - November 2008 - CT Systems (Page 19) Image Technology News - November 2008 - CT Systems (Page 20) Image Technology News - November 2008 - CT Systems (Page 21) Image Technology News - November 2008 - CT Systems (Page 24) Image Technology News - November 2008 - CT Systems (Page 25) Image Technology News - November 2008 - CT Systems (Page 26) Image Technology News - November 2008 - CT Systems (Page 27) Image Technology News - November 2008 - CT Systems (Page 28) Image Technology News - November 2008 - CT Systems (Page 29) Image Technology News - November 2008 - CT Systems (Page 30) Image Technology News - November 2008 - CT Systems (Page 31) Image Technology News - November 2008 - Imaging (Page 32) Image Technology News - November 2008 - Imaging (Page 33) Image Technology News - November 2008 - An Image is Worth a Thousand Words (Page 34) Image Technology News - November 2008 - Ultrasound Systems (Page 35) Image Technology News - November 2008 - MBI Takes on FFDM (Page 36) Image Technology News - November 2008 - MBI Takes on FFDM (Page 37) Image Technology News - November 2008 - MBI Takes on FFDM (Page 38) Image Technology News - November 2008 - MBI Takes on FFDM (Page 39) Image Technology News - November 2008 - Trouble in Multi-PACS Paradise (Page 40) Image Technology News - November 2008 - Trouble in Multi-PACS Paradise (Page 41) Image Technology News - November 2008 - Trouble in Multi-PACS Paradise (Page 42) Image Technology News - November 2008 - Trouble in Multi-PACS Paradise (Page 43) Image Technology News - November 2008 - Trouble in Multi-PACS Paradise (Page 44) Image Technology News - November 2008 - Trouble in Multi-PACS Paradise (Page 45) Image Technology News - November 2008 - When is Appropriateness Criteria Appropriate? (Page 46) Image Technology News - November 2008 - When is Appropriateness Criteria Appropriate? (Page 47) Image Technology News - November 2008 - RIS/PACS in a Web 2.0 World (Page 48) Image Technology News - November 2008 - RIS/PACS in a Web 2.0 World (Page 49) Image Technology News - November 2008 - Digital Mammography Helps Center Continue its Commitment to the Best in Patient-Focused Breast Cancer (Page 50) Image Technology News - November 2008 - Cardiovascular Imaging Systems (Page 51) Image Technology News - November 2008 - Cardiovascular Imaging Systems (Page 52) Image Technology News - November 2008 - Cardiovascular Imaging Systems (Page 53) Image Technology News - November 2008 - Cardiovascular Imaging Systems (Page 54) Image Technology News - November 2008 - PARCA Extends Expertise to World PACS Market (Page 55) Image Technology News - November 2008 - PARCA Extends Expertise to World PACS Market (Page 56)
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