PACS Deployment-LUMC
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Transcript PACS Deployment-LUMC
BEAMING IMAGES
RADIOLOGY PACS IMPLEMENTATIONTHE ROAD TO A FILMLESS
ENVIRONMENT
Members
Robert E. Henkin, MD, Mary Olson, MD,
Robert H. Wagner, MD, Denise Punka,
James Halama, PhD, John Tu, MD, Art
Krumrey, Tess McCoo, James Ryva, Mario
Ayala, Gary Stevens, Renee Abelarde, Ron
Price
Opportunity for
Improvement
Radiology operation has shifted from a primarily
hospital based operation to a combination of
hospital, out-patient and multi-satellite. Hardcopy films were no longer serving the demand
for viewing the study in various locations at
the same time. Due to manual distribution of
films, there was a significant risk for losing or
misplacing them making it unavailable for
review, reading or copying.
Most Likely Causes
Multi-disciplinary
physician practice requires the
films to be reviewed by multiple physicians in
various locations on the same day
Transport of films from site to site was a manual
process which takes time and sometimes contributes
to the loss of films
Lost film sometimes cannot be reconstructed and
this causes non-read of films, repeat procedures and
bad service to clinicians
The network served by the department is dispersed
into a large geographical area such that manual
distribution of films no longer serves the needs of
the operation
Solutions implemented
Replaced
old X-Ray equipment with DR and
CRs
Purchased & implement a PACS system
Purchased CR plates for small satellites
Integrated modalities and the PACS
IT arranged access to images via web-browser &
worked with Dr. Tu’s group to post images &
results in the EMR
Deployed PACS viewing workstations in
strategic areas
Designed QA processes to monitor key steps
Radiology PACS
PACS
? What is PACS?
PACS stands for Picture Archival and
Communication System. It is a technology that
allows images from procedures (CT Scan, Nuclear
Medicine, Diagnostic X-Rays etc) to be stored in
digital form in a computer (central archive). The
images can then be accessed by various users such as
a Radiologist to interpret the study or an attending
physician to look at the pictures and to view the
report. Images can be viewed using a special
workstation or on a regular PC via a web-browser.
PACS Deployment-LUMC
PACs
Workstations are
in
Main
Reading Room
CT Reading Room
Neuro Reading Room
Nuclear Medicine
Ultrasound
Special Procedures
Reading Room
ER
OR-Physician Lounge
PACS Deployment-LOC,
Cancer Center, Satellites
Outside
of the hospital we
installed workstations in;
LOC-Radiology
Women’s
Health Radiology
LOC-Ortho Clinic
LOC-Ambulatory Surgery
Cancer Center
Orland Park Primary Care
Oak Brook Imaging Center
Results
PACS
implementation facilitated interpretation of
studies by making the images readily available. The
number of cases in “complete” but not read status
declined significantly.
Percentage of Specific Modality
Volume
Studies in "Complete" Status
3.00
2.50
2.00
1.50
1.00
0.50
0.00
US
NM
MRI
Specials
(Neuro/Vasc.)
Specials-Neuro
Diag
CT
% of
Studies
June
2003
% of
Studies
(Nov
2003)
Average Report TAT is less than 1 day
Completed Test to Final Report
120
Turnaround Time (Hours)
100
80
Mean = 73
Implemented
Voice
Recognition
technology
Implemented
PACs
60
40
Mean = 36
20
Mean = 20
0
Radiology PACS
PACS
workstations were deployed in all
major sites of operation in addition CR
plates were purchased for smaller
satellites so that images taken from those
areas can still be “read” and archived on
PACS
Due to technology restrictions
Mammography is not yet on PACS
Conclusion
Radiology embarked on a collaborative effort to
implement PACS, a new technology to store and
distribute images across the health system. This project
resulted in tremendous improvement:
Images can now be viewed
concurrently in multilocations
Achieved goal of being
“filmless”. Note the new LOC
is built with this in mind
Addressed problem of
unavailability of films
Increased patient & physician
satisfaction
Increased availability of
images- web , EMR
Film security- prevent loss &
mirror archive
Positive impact on report
turnaround time
Implemented QA process on
workstation performance
Next Steps
Expand
QA processes to cover
Computerized Radiography and
Digital Radiography operations
to ensure optimum quality of
images sent to PACS.