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1.
J Digit Imaging ; 35(4): 785-795, 2022 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35915366

ABSTRACT

While in the last decade there has been significant technical infrastructure development to support standards-based image exchange through organizations like Integrating the Healthcare Enterprise, Carequality, DICOM, and HL7 FHIR, the human operationalization of such infrastructure using centralized, intuitive, standards-based applications remains the cornerstone of effective and reliable electronic image exchange. Image libraries managing the highly transactional and often uncertain inflows and outflows of images have a unique perspective on the challenges of image exchange. This manuscript will summarize frequent collaboration and communication, release of information, staffing, technology, information localization, and analytics difficulties for image exchange from the perspective of the image library staff managing the transactions.


Subject(s)
Communication , Delivery of Health Care , Electronic Health Records , Humans
2.
J Digit Imaging ; 34(4): 974-985, 2021 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34255217

ABSTRACT

The consolidation of information technology (IT) teams from individual facilities to an enterprise-wide reporting structure and the transition of IT staff from operating within a diagnostic imaging department, such as Radiology, to an enterprise IT group is common. The plan to optimize this workforce can have undesirable and unintended consequences, if not done correctly. For those organizations seeking to optimize their workforce to deliver the best possible IT services, including to areas that produce and use medical imaging, this can be an exercise of balancing specialized knowledge and centralized staffing capacity planning. Successfully blending staff that have developed through careers in either general or imaging IT areas into a single team structure requires an understanding of their traditional attitudes, priorities, and skill sets. This paper explores the historic similarities and differences in the skill sets and work cultures between imaging and Enterprise IT, and how to use both to deliver the best outcomes.


Subject(s)
Radiology Information Systems , Radiology , Diagnostic Imaging , Humans , Information Technology
3.
J Digit Imaging ; 29(5): 583-614, 2016 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27576909

ABSTRACT

This white paper explores the technical challenges and solutions for acquiring (capturing) and managing enterprise images, particularly those involving visible light applications. The types of acquisition devices used for various general-purpose photography and specialized applications including dermatology, endoscopy, and anatomic pathology are reviewed. The formats and standards used, and the associated metadata requirements and communication protocols for transfer and workflow are considered. Particular emphasis is placed on the importance of metadata capture in both order- and encounter-based workflow. The benefits of using DICOM to provide a standard means of recording and accessing both metadata and image and video data are considered, as is the role of IHE and FHIR.


Subject(s)
Diagnostic Imaging , Information Storage and Retrieval , Systems Integration , Workflow , Humans , Radiology Information Systems , Reference Standards
4.
J Digit Imaging ; 27(3): 331-6, 2014 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24435562

ABSTRACT

Structured reporting, created when a standardized template with organized subheadings is combined with relevant observations of a diagnostic study into a meaningful result, has the potential to raise both the quality and the predictability of the radiologist report, revolutionizing the workflow and its outcomes. These templates contain great value, as they carve a path based on best practice for the radiologist to follow, and thus should be shared, reviewed, and improved. Unfortunately, these templates are often not shareable today due to a lack of standards for describing and transporting templates. This paper outlines and discusses an appropriate and effective electronic method for transporting radiology report templates using of the style of representational state transfer (REST). Enabling a structured radiology report template library with REST enables just-in-time accessibility of templates, achieving efficiencies and effectiveness.


Subject(s)
Documentation/methods , Information Dissemination/methods , Information Storage and Retrieval/methods , Radiology Information Systems/standards , Humans , Total Quality Management , United States
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