Managing Non-DICOM Images Within an Enterprise Imaging Solution Agenda • Enterprise Imaging / Non-DICOM Market Trends

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Managing Non-DICOM Images Within an Enterprise Imaging Solution Agenda • Enterprise Imaging / Non-DICOM Market Trends Managing Non-DICOM Images within an Enterprise Imaging Solution Agenda • Enterprise Imaging / Non-DICOM Market Trends • Managing Non-DICOM Images in the Enterprise • Merge’s Non-DICOM Solution Options • Questions? Enterprise Imaging / Non-DICOM Trends 3 Interoperability Market Drivers M&A / Consolidation Enterprise Image Management Clinical and Financial Economies of Scale Comprehensive Image Record Connecting Providers EHR Optimization Patient Centric Care Across Sites Unified Patient Image Record 4 Providers Generate a Flood of Data Digital Clinical Objects Specialty MPEG, JPEG Other Most Common Devices DICOM A/V, WAV , PDF Clinical Anesthesia In Room C-Arm, X-ray, Anesthetic, Record Keeping Reports Cardiology CVMR, CVCT, Cath, CVUS, CVECG / Holter / Stress / Pace Dermatology Photos, dermatological Reports Emergency Medicine X-ray, CT, ECG, Triage Reports Endocrinology SPECT / CT, PET / CT, Physician Reports, Voice Dictation Files Family Medicine Physician Notes, Reports Gastroenterology Barium X-ray, CT, NM, Endoscopes, US, Reports, Voice Dictation Files Hematology HT Reports, Voice Dictation Files ICU Medicine In Dept C-Arm, X-ray, Patient CIS Flow Chart Reports Nephrology US and MRI Angiography, Scintigraphy (Nuc Med) Reports Voice Neurology Renal Scans, SPECT/CT, PET/CT, Physician Reports, Renal Grams, Voice iConnect™ Solution Nuclear Medicine Stored in a VNA US, Physician Reports, Voice Dictation Files Obstetrics X-ray, CT, US, Reports, Voice Dictation Files, Fetal Strips, Reports Oncology FDG-PET, CT,• X-Singleray, Treatment Database Plans, Densitometry, Biograph Reports Ophthalmology Ophthalmology Laser Images, Physician Reports, Voice Dictation Files Oral Surgery Dental X-rays,• PhysicianSingle Reports Storage Pool Pathology Digital & Scanned• Single Pathology, ServerPathology Reports, Voice Dictation Files Pediatrics Nuclear VCUG, DMSA Scans, Reports, Voice Dictation Files Pulmonology CT Gamma,• SPECT,Single PET, Reports, Admin Voice ToolDictation Files Radiology MR, CT, XR, US, NM, Radiology Reports, Voice Dictation Files Rehab Medicine Brain Lab Reports,• Single Voice Dictation Viewer Files Rheumatology US, MRI, Rheumatology• Single Reports, Vendor Voice Dictation Files Surgery In Department X-ray, Endoscopes, Surgery Reports Urology MR, XR, Digital Fluoroscopy Reports, Voice Dictation Files DICOM + non-DICOM / Dark Data 1,600,000 2017 Forecast 1,400,000 • 1.4B Objects / Year 1,200,000 • 51% VNA 5 Yr CAGR 1,000,000 • ~75% are Non-DICOM 800,000 600,000 Key Drivers 400,000 • Increased PACS to (000s) Annual Volume 200,000 VNA Attach Rate 0 • Growth in Non-DICOM 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 PACS Study Volume VNA Study Volume Managing Non-DICOM Images in the Enterprise 7 Developing a Non-DICOM Solution • Managing Clinical Image Content is about workflow • Non-DICOM Clinical Content is often Dark Data – Gartner defines dark data as “the information assets organizations collect, process and store during regular business activities, but generally fail to use for other purposes” • Goal: Ingest Store View a patient’s complete image record (DICOM and non-DICOM) within the context of the patients medical record Key Workflow Questions For each service line: • Orders or Encounters Based? • DICOM vs. XDS vs. XDS-I XDS Object XDS-I Object DICOM Object Surgical Encounter Dermatology Services Radiology / Order ENT Cardiology XDS vs. XDS-I: XDS-I typically involves DICOM exams stored in a DICOM Archive (e.g. PACS or VNA) and registered with an XDS Registry. This provides the benefits of DICOM and XDS. Developing a Service Line Workflow The Bookends define the Use Case Acquire the • from a clinical perspective Content • Create the Content • Who Normalize • Device the Content • Format • Demographics / Metadata Start with the Bookends • Consume the Content Store the • Who Content • Workflow System (EMR, HIE, etc.) • Viewer (PACS, Enterprise, Specialist) • This information will inform the View the decision about DICOM vs. XDS and Content Merge vs. 3rd party Solutions Merge’s XDS Capabilities PIX/PDQ EA can be a PIX /PDQ Patient Identity Source (EMR, mrg. when in MPI mode EMPI or PIX/PDQ Manager) Patient ID Feed iConnect Access Query for XDS Document Documents XDS Document Registry Consumer iCEA v11.3 Provide and Register XDS Source Register Document Set Data Conversion to XDS Document Source XDS Tools Repository MDM Manifest Retrieve Documents Image Source iConnect • Retrieve Images Enterprise Archive • Retrieve Evidence Documents v11.1 • WADO Retrieve IHE Connectathon 2015: 32 Unique Vendors iConnect Enterprise Archive iConnect Access 24 Vendors 19 Vendors CDC BHS Athena Agfa Dell EMC CAREEV GE CERTIFY INFINITT ITH icoserve OpenHIE ezCaretech KAROS NEXTGATE QUADRAMET Hyland Healthland OPTUM Perceptive / Acuo SAMSUNG IntelHealth INTERSYS Oracle TeraMedica Sandlot Smarter Summit QVERA Care Tiani-Cisco Siemens VSB iCEA Merge’s Non-DICOM Solution Options Non-DICOM DICOM Non-DICOM XDS Non-DICOM XDS-I Non-DICOM to DICOM 1 Patient Registers Capture Searches a patient’s 3 photo record for images EMR 7 HL7 ORM 2 or ADT to MWL Launches 8 Access via Secure URL MWL 4 Query Store 5 DICOM 6 9 Retrieves exam Availability from VNA Notification to EMR iCEA Non-DICOM to XDS: User Initiated Workflow 1 Patient Registers Capture Searches a patient’s 3 photo record for images EMR 10 HL7 ORM Launch 4 2 Notify (Order) MDM with 9 EMR 5 or Metadata 11 Upload HL7 ADT Launches File(s) (Encounter) Access via Secure URL MWL to Query MWL 6 Exceptions Worklist 8 12 Retrieves exam Register from XDS 7 Document with Repository Store XDS XDS Registry Object in XDS Repository iCEA Non-DICOM to XDS: Polling Workflow 1 Patient Registers Searches a patient’s 3 Capture photo record for images EMR 10 2 HL7 ORM Notify (Order) 9 EMR or 4 Exceptions HL7 ADT Launches 11 Worklist (Encounter) Access via 5 Secure URL 6 to Poll for MWL Store Content File MWL Query (with Partial Metadata) 8 12 Retrieves exam Register from XDS 7 Document with Repository Store XDS XDS Registry Object in XDS Repository iCEA Non-DICOM to XDS-I 1 Patient Registers Capture Searches a patient’s 3 photo record for images EMR 9 HL7 ORM 2 or ADT to 10 MWL 8 Launches Access via Notify Secure URL MWL EMR 4 Query 5 Store DICOM to Image Source Store KOS in 6 XDS Repository 7 11 Retrieves exam Register Document from XDS Image Integrated Source / with XDS Registry Source Repository iCEA Dermatology Workflow • Encounter Based Workflow – No Order or Accession # from EMR – iConnect Enterprise Archive Creates Accession Number • Infrastructure – 3rd Party Dermatology Camera App – iConnect Enterprise Archive – iConnect Access – Epic EMR • Goal: Develop a non-DICOM workflow that could be generalized to many service lines and facilities Provider Provider selects Patient Provider Patient visits decides to Patient from Start “Checked In’ Examines Derm Clinic acquire Cameras for Visit Patient images Worklist ADT^A01 A04 ADT creates EA Sends with DEP and Encounter Provider unsolicited HL7 CSN from Based Order MWL Query Selects Body ORU Message to EMR on EA MWL Part / Location, EMR with CSN and Disorder in Camera Match Unsolicited Proc. Procedure Code Images Provider Accession Record(s) created applied based on transferred acquires image MWL-R Number against CSN / mapping to Study via Wi-Fi to for each body Created Encounter Description iCEA part / disorder No Match Hyperlink created in EMR with Proc. End Provider Description clicks Send Exception Workflow End 19 Survey Who has had PACS at their institution for more than 7 years? Who has migrated their data from one system to another? When you bought PACS, were you aware that your vendor stored the data in a proprietary “flavor” of DICOM? Implications of storing your non-DICOM data in a proprietary format: 1. Can only view the data using that vendors viewer 2. Expensive proprietary migration in the future 3. Can you give that proprietary data to a patient if they ask for it? 4. Vendor Lock-In Summary Integrated Solution with a Single Database Unified Infrastructure – Storage + Servers Single Admin Tool for DICOM and XDS Robust and Proven Business Continuity and Disaster Recovery Solution Enterprise Viewer showing all clinical images Questions? .
Recommended publications
  • Microsoft Amalga the Unified Intelligence System
    m Microsoft Amalga the Unified Intelligence System > Turn information into health intelligence and critical knowledge PG 02 MICROSOFT AMALGA MICROSOFT AMALGA PG 03 Our vision: For more than a decade, Microsoft has invested significant time and resources into understanding the needs of healthcare organizations. We are developing solutions that To improve health encompass both the provider and the consumer to help you achieve your goals from better patient care to improving the financial health of your organization. We believe around the world the issues that Microsoft is best positioned to address focus on healthcare information management—getting the right data in front of the right people in the right way at the right time. That’s why we’re working to speed and improve the capture, manipulation, aggregation, and presentation of healthcare data by offering a family of integrated IT systems for the healthcare enterprise. The Microsoft® Amalga™ Family of Enterprise Health Systems is built on Microsoft technology, offering a comprehensive range of solutions to meet the needs of your health enterprise. Microsoft Amalga Microsoft Amalga, the new version of the product formerly known as Azyxxi, is the Unified Intelligence System that allows hospital enterprises to unlock the power of all their data sitting in clinical, financial, and administrative silos. Without replacing current systems, Amalga offers leading-edge institutions an innovative way to capture, consoli- date, store, access, and quickly present data in meaningful ways. Microsoft Amalga Hospital Information System Microsoft Amalga Hospital Information System (HIS), the new version of Hospital 2000, is a state-of-the-art, integrated hospital information system designed to meet the needs of developing and emerging markets.
    [Show full text]
  • Intro to HL7 and DICOM
    Working in an Integrated Digital Healthcare Enterprise 2004 Introduction and Update to HL7 and DICOM Herman Oosterwijk, Adjunct faculty, University of North Texas President OTech Inc. [email protected] www.otechimg.com DICOM/HL7 slide 1 Working in an Integrated Digital Healthcare Enterprise 2004 Agenda: ! What is HL7 ! What’s new in HL7 ! What is DICOM ! What’s new in DICOM ! Conclusion, Q and A DICOM/HL7 slide 2 DICOM/HL7 what’s new? Herman Oosterwijk www.otechimg.com page 1 Working in an Integrated Digital Healthcare Enterprise 2004 What is HL7: ! A pragmatic, simple protocol to exchange information dealing with, for example: ! Patient registration ! Orders (clinical, radiology, laboratory, etc.) ! results and observations ! queries, e.g. for patient demographics ! finance for billing purposes ! master files and indexes ! document control, such as approval status ! scheduling and logistics DICOM/HL7 slide 3 Working in an Integrated Digital Healthcare Enterprise 2004 Information Workflow example: Broker System Ordering, Scheduling Modality Worklist Mgt HL7 Storage Archive Storage Cmt Reporting Retrieve Performed Procedure Viewing Step DICOM/HL7 slide 4 DICOM/HL7 what’s new? Herman Oosterwijk www.otechimg.com page 2 Working in an Integrated Digital Healthcare Enterprise 2004 DICOM vs HL7 ! Scope is Imaging ! Scope beyond Imaging ! Protocol is mainly ! Protocol is Event driven, Client/Server i.e. unsolicited Events ! Based on Object ! Object Oriented in v 3.0 Oriented principles ! Attributes encoded ! Attributes: text strings ! Conformance
    [Show full text]
  • (DICOM) Part 16: Content Mapping Resource
    PS 3.16-2001 Digital Imaging and Communications in Medicine (DICOM) Part 16: Content Mapping Resource Published by National Electrical Manufacturers Association 1300 N. 17th Street Rosslyn, Virginia 22209 USA © Copyright 2001 by the National Electrical Manufacturers Association. All rights including translation into other languages, reserved under the Universal Copyright Convention, the Berne Convention or the Protection of Literacy and Artistic Works, and the International and Pan American Copyright Conventions. - Standard - PS 3.16 - 2001 Page 2 CONTENTS CONTENTS..........................................................................................................................................................................2 FOREWORD........................................................................................................................................................................4 1.....Scope and field of application...................................................................................................................................5 2.....Normative references .................................................................................................................................................5 BI-RADS Terminology and Nomenclature...................................................................................................5 MQCM 1999 Terminology and Nomenclature................................................................................................5 MQSA Terminology and Nomenclature...........................................................................................................5
    [Show full text]
  • Cooperating Standards in Healthcare GS1 Standards and Other Standards Cooperating in Clinical Treatment Scenarios
    GS1 identifiers Other standards The Global Language of Business GTIN (Global Trade Item Number) SNOMED CT (Systematized Nomenclature of Products such as medicinal products, medical Medicine / Clinical Terms) devices, medical consumables, vaccines, blood It is the most comprehensive and precise clinical derivatives and raw materials at all product and health terminology product in the world, owned and packaging levels (e.g. unit of use, primary distributed around the world by SNOMED Cooperating standards packaging, retail unit, inner pack, case and pallet). International. SNOMED CT has been developed Attributes such as batch/lot number and expiry date collaboratively to ensure it meets the diverse needs in healthcare can provide additional traceability information. and expectations of clinicians worldwide and is now Individual trade item instance(s) can be identified accepted as a common global language for health GS1 standards and other standards by combining the GTIN with a serial number, which is terms. Improved health records, clinical decisions cooperating in clinical treatment scenarios mandated by an increasing number of regulations. and analysis, leading to higher quality, consistency and safety in healthcare delivery benefit from GLN (Global Location Number) SNOMED CT. www.snomed.org Locations: Theatres, Patient rooms, Wards, DICOM (Digital Imaging and Communications in Pharmacies, imprest/Store rooms, Pathology, Medicine) Radiology, Distribution centres, Manufacturing sites, It is the international standard to transmit, store,
    [Show full text]
  • Working with the DICOM Data Standard in R
    Working with the DICOM Data Standard in R Brandon Whitcher Volker J. Schmid Pfizer Worldwide R&D Ludwig-Maximilians Universit¨at Munchen¨ Andrew Thornton Cardiff University Abstract The package oro.dicom facilitates the interaction with and manipulation of medical imaging data that conform to the DICOM standard. DICOM data, from a single file or single directory or directory tree, may be uploaded into R using basic data structures: a data frame for the header information and a matrix for the image data. A list structure is used to organize multiple DICOM files. The conversion from DICOM to ANALYZE/NIfTI is straightforward using the capabilities of oro.dicom and oro.nifti. Keywords: export, imaging, import, medical, visualization. 1. Introduction Medical imaging is well established in both the clinical and research areas with numerous equipment manufacturers supplying a wide variety of modalities. The DICOM (Digital Imag- ing and Communications in Medicine; http://medical.nema.org) standard was developed from earlier standards and released in 1993. It is the data format for clinical imaging equip- ment and a variety of other devices whose complete specification is beyond the scope of this paper. All major manufacturers of medical imaging equipment (e.g., GE, Siemens, Philips) have so-called DICOM conformance statements that explicitly state how their hardware im- plements DICOM. The DICOM standard provides interoperability across hardware, but was not designed to facilitate efficient data manipulation and image processing. Hence, additional data formats have been developed over the years to accommodate data analysis and image processing. The material presented here provides users with a method of interacting with DICOM files in R (R Development Core Team 2010).
    [Show full text]
  • Imaging Reports Using HL7​ Clinical Document Architecture​ Page 2​
    PS3.20​ DICOM PS3.20 2021d - Imaging Reports using HL7​ Clinical Document Architecture​ Page 2​ PS3.20: DICOM PS3.20 2021d - Imaging Reports using HL7 Clinical Document​ Architecture​ Copyright © 2021 NEMA​ A DICOM® publication​ - Standard -​ DICOM PS3.20 2021d - Imaging Reports using HL7 Clinical Document Architecture​ Page 3​ Table of Contents​ Notice and Disclaimer ........................................................................................................................................... 13​ Foreword ............................................................................................................................................................ 15​ 1. Scope and Field of Application ............................................................................................................................. 17​ 2. Normative and Informative References .................................................................................................................. 19​ 3. Definitions ....................................................................................................................................................... 21​ 4. Symbols and Abbreviations ................................................................................................................................. 23​ 5. Conventions ..................................................................................................................................................... 25​ 5.1. Template Metadata ....................................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • DICOM 3.0 Conformance Statement Butterfly Network DICOM Connector
    DICOM 3.0 Conformance Statement Butterfly Network DICOM Connector Published by: Butterfly Network Inc. 530 Old Whitfield Street Guilford, CT 06437 March 20, 2019 Document Version: B Document Number: 950-20005-00 Page 2 of 19 Table of Contents Conformance Statement Overview 3 Introduction 3 Revision History 3 Audience 3 Remarks 4 Definitions, Terms, and Abbreviations 4 References 5 Networking 5 Implementation Model 5 Application Data Flow 7 Functional Definitions of the Application Entities 7 Storage Application Entity 7 Workflow Application Entity 7 Verification Application Entity 8 Sequencing of Real-World Activities 8 Application Entity Specifications 9 SOP Classes 9 Association Policies 9 General 9 Association Initiation Policy 10 Image Store Activity – Real World Triggers 10 Proposed Presentation Contexts to Remote Storage SCP. 10 Query Worklist Activity – Real World Triggers 10 Proposed Presentation Contexts to Remote MWL SCP. 11 SOP Specific Conformance for Worklist Management SOP Class 11 Support of Character Sets 13 Security 13 Security Profiles 13 Basic TLS Secure Transport Connection Profile 13 Association Level Security 13 Application-Level Security 14 Appendix A - IOD Details 15 Supported IOD Specifications 15 © 2019 Butterfly Network Inc 950-20005-00 rev B This is a controlled document. Printed copies are for reference purposes, the original is maintained in electronic format in the Butterfly Network QMS. Page 3 of 19 1. Conformance Statement Overview Butterfly Network’s foundational innovation enables construction of an ultrasound machine on a chip without the need for bulky computers or crystal transducers. The Butterfly iQ Ultrasound transducer connects to a Mobile Device (iPhone or iPad) running the Butterfly iQ mobile App to enable its users to image patients using the ultrasound technology and generate medical images.
    [Show full text]
  • PERSONAL HEALTH RECORD SYSTEM and INTEGRATION TECHNIQUES with VARIOUS ELECTRONIC MEDICAL RECORD SYSTEMS by VISHESH VED a Thesis
    PERSONAL HEALTH RECORD SYSTEM AND INTEGRATION TECHNIQUES WITH VARIOUS ELECTRONIC MEDICAL RECORD SYSTEMS by VISHESH VED A Thesis Submitted to the Faculty of The College of Computer Science and Engineering in Partial Fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Master of Science Florida Atlantic University Boca Raton, Florida May 2010 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS It is a pleasure to thank the many people who made this thesis a success. I am indebted to my supervisor Dr. Abhijit Pandya and Dr Ankur Agarwal for giving me this wonderful opportunity to work under their guidance throughout my Master’s thesis. Their enthusiasm, inspiration and great efforts to explain things clearly and in a simple way helped me to achieve my goals in this study. Thanks to Dr Sam Hsu and Dr Shihong Huang for providing constant support and offering right direction. This work would not have been possible without them. I would also like to thank Dr Borko Furht for showing me the right direction and Jean Mangiaracina for her guidance through administrative hurdles. And of course to my family, thanks for believing in me. iii ABSTRACT Author: Vishesh Ved Title: Personal Health Record System and Integration Techniques with various Electronic Medical Record System Institution: Florida Atlantic University Advisor: Dr. Abhijit Pandya Co – Advisor Dr. Ankur Agarwal Degree: Master of Science Year: 2010 In order to improve the quality of care, there is urgent need to involve patients in their own healthcare. So to make patient centered health care system Personal Health Records are proposed as viable solution. This research discusses the importance of a Patient Centric Health Record system.
    [Show full text]
  • The Need for a Global Language - SNOMED CT Introduction
    The need for a global language - SNOMED CT introduction Jane Millar Collaboration Lead Ian Green Clinical Engagement and Education business manager Purpose of tutorial ▪ Increasing knowledge of SNOMED CT and its applicability for healthcare professionals, ▪ Outlining how SNOMED CT contributes to the EHR and the benefits for those caring for individuals. ▪ Provides details of the work with ICN to align SNOMED CT and ICNP and practically what this means for nursing documentation and the shared EHR Objectives therefore: ▪ Attendees will: ▪ be able to understand what SNOMED CT is and how it fits in the EHR with other standards ▪ have an insight into its importance in supporting the information requirements for Nursing practice ▪ have an insight into the importance of nursing input into the development of SNOMED CT ▪ know how you can extend your knowledge of SNOMED CT Agenda ▪ SNOMED CT and its place as part of the EHR (part 1) ▪ Background ▪ What is SNOMED CT Break – group work ▪ SNOMED CT and its place as part of the EHR (part 2) ▪ Scope and usage of SNOMED CT ▪ Clinical input to SNOMED CT ▪ IHTSDO approach to Collaboration ▪ Linking SNOMED CT and ICNP through Collaboration Break – group work ▪ Feedback from break ▪ Taking SNOMED CT home ▪ What next, education, finding out more etc Approach ▪ High level view only in the time, with guidance on where to find out more ▪ As interactive as possible – ▪ Sharing experience of those in the room ▪ Take questions as we go – please raise your hand to indicate you have a question SNOMED CT and the EHR
    [Show full text]
  • DICOM Conformance Statement
    NilRead4.4.x DICOM Conformance Statement Company Name: Hyland Product Name: NilRead Enterprise Viewer Product Version: 4.4.X Date: May 2019 © 2019 Hyland International Technology S.A. All rights reserved 990-12023, Rev 1.0 1 May 2019 1 Conformance Statement Overview 1.1 Overview The NilRead enterprise viewer implements various DICOM native or web-based services that allow NilRead to view, receive, query/retrieve, send/export DICOM images and data sets from/to various DICOM network storage devices, removable medias or print to a network hardcopy device. This conformance claim refers to the conformance claim for the NilRead enterprise viewer for all such services. 1.2 Image storage SOP Classes: The NilRead enterprise viewer is a level 2 SCP that is capable of storing, sending, querying, retrieving and displaying the following data: 12-lead ECG Waveform Storage Ambulatory ECG Waveform Storage Basic Text SR Storage Breast Tomosynthesis Image Storage Cardiac Electrophysiology Waveform Storage Color Softcopy Presentation State Storage SOP Class Comprehensive SR Storage Computed Radiography Image Storage CT Image Storage Digital Intra-Oral X-Ray Image Storage – For Presentation Digital Intra-Oral X-Ray Image Storage – For Processing Digital Mammography X-Ray Image Storage – For Presentation Digital Mammography X-Ray Image Storage – For Processing Digital X-Ray Image Storage – For Presentation Digital X-Ray Image Storage – For Processing Encapsulated CDA Storage Encapsulated PDF Storage Enhanced CT Image Storage Enhanced MR
    [Show full text]
  • Images, Electronic Health Records, and Meaningful Use: a Vision For
    Images, Electronic Health Records, and Meaningful Use: A Vision for the Future January 10–11, 2011 Bethesda, Maryland Executive Summary, Discussions, and Recommendations EXECUTIVE SUMMARY: MOVING TOWARD MULTIMEDIA ELECTRONIC HEALTH RECORDS: HOW DO WE GET THERE? The National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering (NIBIB) and the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC) co-sponsored a workshop in January 2011 to consider the opportunities and implications for health care when electronic health records (EHRs) contain multimedia data. The workshop provided a venue for a diverse group of stakeholders to share their vision and perspectives on both technical and practical implementation issues and how these issues may inform the future development of the definition of Meaningful Use of Electronic Health Records under the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health Act, 2009. The meeting was specifically not for policy development regarding Meaningful Use. Drawing from this diverse group of health care providers, patient advocates, health system leaders, payers, and commercial vendors, this workshop report presents a summary of their viewpoints and concludes with possible pathways toward multimedia electronic health records. When considering meaningful use of images, participants considered it important to focus on the goal of creating value and efficiency in health care and that health outcome should be the driving force toward that goal. Participants also recognized that electronic health records should be patient-centered and controlled. While safeguarding patient privacy, they also note that it is crucial to be able to access health information regardless of location to enable care providers to make decisions based on comprehensive, relevant data on the patient, including image data, at the point of care.
    [Show full text]
  • Improved Security and Speed in the GE Healthcare Centricity™ Clinical Archive Figure 2 Shows the EIP’S Hardware and Software Components, with Table 1
    Improved Security and Speed in GE Healthcare's Centricity™ Clinical Archive by Malcolm Catella, Sr., Staff Enterprise Architect, GE Healthcare; Lokendra Uppuluri, Enterprise Analytics Solutions Solution Architect, Intel Corporation; Rick Cnossen, Enterprise Analytics Solutions Solution Lead, Intel Corporation; Wendy Bohner, Health & Life Sciences Solutions Architect, Intel Corporation Enhance enterprise image management and IT operations by Solution Benefits implementing GE Healthcare Centricity™ Clinical Archive on • Consolidate patient data silos optimized, validated hyper-converged infrastructure based on and enable data sharing across the care continuum technologies from Dell EMC™, Intel, and VMware • Excellent performance for a responsive user experience Executive Summary • Effective system scaling to GE Healthcare Centricity™ Clinical Archive is the world's leading Vendor-Neutral Archive (VNA) accommodate growth solution1 that provides 360-degree imaging and multi-media patient content with seamless • Efficient encryption to access through the EMR-integrated, zero-footprint diagnostic viewer to empower directed strengthen data security care and coordination across the enterprise. Based on industry interoperability standards like • Flexibility to accommodate IHE, DICOM web, and XDS, GE Healthcare has a proven record of multi-vendor clinical system emerging analytics workloads integrations and large-scale deployments that connect clinicians across hospitals, health systems, and regions in order to help drive improved patient outcomes.
    [Show full text]