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by mmatthews 11/23/2009 12:56:00 PM
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Flashback

by esanchez 12/8/2008 6:54:00 PM

Data storage, disaster recovery, and archiving solutions were plentiful on the RSNA floor this year, highlighting the demand from healthcare customers to organize increasing amounts of patient information. Before the show opened, I chatted with Buzz Walker, vice president of marketing and product management at ProStor Systems, about the Boulder, Colo., data storage company, and he provided me with a helpful overview of the booming industry. Healthcare institutions, he said, are trying "to solve the exploding need to store more and more information." His company offers the medical community " a way to replace technology that are becoming obsolete," in a way that is compatible and consistent with what is used already. The ProStor InfiniVault-DICOM is removable disk technology that serves as an intelligent long-term archive for images, as well as patient files, with a shelf life  of 30 years. Addressing cost savings, ProStor says its product reduces power consumption by up to 75%, eliminates expensive technology migrations, and protects images with multiple removable copies.

 

Compressus to the Rescue

by esanchez 12/3/2008 6:18:00 PM

A woman walked into Compressus' booth the other day and described her department's trouble managing all the disparate PACS on site. Her staff faced challenges in looking up patient information timely and efficiently amongst the multiple systems in house.  "Can you help?" she implored. Compressus was happy to inform her about the next generation MEDxConnect Version 2.5, a thin-client solution that Product Manager Ed Schuler says offers complete interoperability. Just last week, the company finished installing the single enterprise-wide worklist solution at Seattle Radiologists, APC. The technology enables physicians to read from anywhere, automatically pre-fetch prior exams, and transmit messages and cases between sites.

The system can be integrated with GE Centricity PACS, Centricity IW, Philips iSite, Hologic SecurView, Visage Imaging, PowerScribe speech recognition software, and Merge e-FILM.

After-Thanksgiving Day Sale

by esanchez 12/3/2008 5:24:00 PM

During these hard financial times, no one can resist a good sale. Knowing this, CoActiv is selling a $15,000 PACS for almost half price, at $7,995, as an RSNA special. The EXAM-Essentials plug and play PACS is ideal for facilities without big budgets, said Ed Heere, the company's president and CEO. It installs in just minutes and is compatible with a full spectrum of imaging modalities and associated DICOM data sets, including radiology, cardiology, orthopedics, radiation oncology and radiation therapy. Essentially, the turnkey system offers an economical upgrade path to accomodate a practice's expanding imaging needs.

Also announced, CoActiv's EXAM-PACS now supports a range of emerging modalities and new imaging-related workflow, including the following:

MIMVista radiology/nuclear medicine files for fusion imaging

MedImage nuclear medicine/radiology fusion

PeerVue applications

Dragon Naturally Speaking 

Dilon Technologies BSGI files

Digital mammography

Breast ultrasound

Breast MRI

Hurry over to Booth 7336 in the North Hall to enjoy the sale while it lasts!

Step into the Light

by esanchez 12/2/2008 8:32:00 PM

A theme that emerged in today's booth tours and lectures was the importance of radiologists' participation in patient treatment -- and even further on a broader level, shaping health policy.

Matt McLenon, CEO of Softek Solutions Inc., said his customers are realizing that to keep the profession on U.S. soil, they have to play an integral role in monitoring follow-up exams and becoming more involved in the care process. Helping them accomplish this goal, Softek made its RSNA debut this year, demonstrating its Illuminate product. 


A plug-and-play product, Illuminate is a free-text search solutionthat allows for data-mining within the Philips iSite PACS. With the technology, iSite users can set up a variety of alerts, such as exam alerts that notify them of a scheduled, or missed, scan for a particular patient. An image alert enables users to send critical cases to other doctors, while a patient alert lets users monitor a patient over time. McLenon also demonstrated the significance of a search criteria alert, which notifies users of new indexed studies that match a specific search criterion.

During her RSNA Gold Medal acceptance speech, honoree Peggy J. Fritzsche, M.D., reminisced about the days when radiologists, confined to poorly lit rooms, used goggles to help them read film. "As radiologists, we no longer need the goggles, but we are still working in the dark," she told her peers, who had filled the Arie Crowne Theater. Fritzsche urged her fellow radiologists to feel the power of the human encounter and participate in the advocacy work of the professional societies.

Later, guest orator Elizabebth G. McFarland, M.D., stressed the importance of fighting the obstacles to CTC coverage. "Political involvement is everything at this point in the game," she stated, inciting audience members to use their voices and "give CMS the information they need to know."

Speech Understanding

by esanchez 12/1/2008 10:45:00 PM

The term “speech recognition” is a misnomer when describing M*Modal’s AnyModal CDS, according to Chief Medical Officer Nick van Terheyden, because the technology does much more than just recognize words. Specifically, it combines propriety speech recognition and natural understanding technologies to deliver structured and encoded clinical documents. To demonstrate the company’s new AnyModal CDS Mobile application, van Terheyden whipped out an Apple iPhone and dictated right in the middle of the noisy tradeshow floor. He showed us how the technology can capture, understand, and transcribe in real-time—an attractive solution for the busy, tech-savvy radiologist.

 

 

Photo courtesy of M*Modal

Scrambled, CEO’s, and Strategy

by mmatthews 12/1/2008 10:30:00 PM
It was hours ago, but thinking back, we got more than scrambled eggs this morning. We got strategy -- the top line message about Siemens’ place in the market and where it plans to go. The company held a media breakfast; two new big wigs did a fine job of outlining the company’s position and vision for the future. Hermann Requardt, CEO, Healthcare Sector talked a good deal about cost savings in health care being connected to the continuum of care – starting with prevention, specific diagnosis, efficient therapy and ultimately high-quality care. He touched on top trends that are affecting health care and medical imaging such as a growing aging population, growing wealth in emerging markets, and cost pressure and reimbursement reduction. One of his messages: Health care IT and imaging must go together in order to help providers be more efficient and meet the challenges of cost pressure. …Clearly, costs continue to be a major concern for providers and manufacturers are responding with solutions. More on that later. 

Sharing a Voice

by esanchez 12/1/2008 10:04:00 PM

During a meeting in booth 7113 of the North Hall, MedQuist discussed how others in the industry are implementing its SpeechQ for Radiology solution into their own technologies. With six new partnerships, MedQuist announced new integrated solutions with Inland Imaging LLC, StructuRad LLC, Primordial Inc LLC, Clario Medical Imaging Inc., Elsevier, and Lanier Healthcare Canada. I was treated to a demonstration of the speech recognition solution’s integration with Clario’s zVision software, which results in a single access point capable of managing workflow and dictation. As I mentioned earlier, expediting workflow processes is an area on which many vendors are focusing, and enhancing, their existing solutions.

Booming Business

by esanchez 12/1/2008 9:12:00 PM

The folks at McKesson are finding themselves busier this year than last, and they attribute the increased business, ironically enough, to the slow economic environment. The company serves as a safe harbor for its customers, say George Kovacs and colleague Bob Baumgartner, both directors of product marketing. McKesson’s suite of IT offerings assists radiology practices in maximizing revenue and decreasing costs. This lets customers concentrate on what they do best, which isn’t always the management/operational side. As Kovacs and Baumgartner put it, “They have no idea what they don’t know about.”

During this election year, I remember thinking about how fun it would be to play around with CNN’s interactive map. The same desire to poke and prod came today during my time at the McKesson booth, where the company demonstrated a multitouch radiologist station. Moving your index fingers on both hands zooms images in and out, and with one “To infinity and beyond”-like hand motion, the user can virtually throw the case over to the on-call radiologist, who the system identifies and locates automatically. Influenced by the gaming industry, the works-in-progress product is all about efficiency and streamlining workflow.