by John Romlein, John C. Weiser PhD
Part II: PACS maintenance and quality control within the health care enterprise is best accomplished by developing a task allocation chart.
The delineation of warranty and maintenance tasks for a system
as large and as spread out as a PACS is a complex undertaking. The
best method of achieving complete visibility and flexibility is to
develop a matrix of tasks vs available resources. A task allocation
chart (TAC) is a table of QC, warranty, and maintenance-related
tasks with several associated attributes. Each task can be assigned
to different departments or organizations for action. The
availability and willingness of in-house resources are a large
factor in the development of the TAC. All foreseen tasks should be
listed in the TAC: PACS system administration, PACS component
operation, QC, preventive maintenance, calibration, minor repair,
major repair, component replacement, configuration documentation,
and record keeping. The enterprise should make the task allocation
chart available to all involved facilities and organizations so
that proper planning and resource programming can be performed in
support of the PACS life cycle.
A task allocation chart is accurate only as long as the
attributes for each chart match the real world situation. Changes
in equipment inventories, contract specifications, hardware options
and test equipment requirements, budget cuts, physics support
contracts, and staffing cutbacks are examples of factors that cause
task allocation charts to become inaccurate or unusable. Hospitals
should review their PACS task allocation chart at least annually to
ensure that updates are made as needed.
Figure 1. Task allocation chart development model.
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Figure 1 reflects the Task Allocation Chart Development Model.
This model depicts the following processes: (1) identify
maintenance tasks across the entire enterprise from a combination
of technical and administrative sources; (2) identify resources
within the enterprise that can be assigned against those tasks; (3)
identify vendor-unique resources that must be added to enterprise
resources to complete the required coverage of maintenance tasks;
and (4) negotiate with all member sites of the enterprise and the
vendors for the assignment of resources against all maintenance
tasks.
PHASED-IN MAINTENANCE PLAN
Creating task allocation charts that match the planned division
of maintenance responsibilities for any point in time can migrate
away from complete vendor maintenance toward more in-house tasks.
This can be further extended to include an enterprise distribution
of tasks. Examples of three task allocation charts are provided
below to demonstrate this migration away from vendor services to an
increasingly more self-sufficient position.
Vendor-Provided Full Service. Under a full service contract, the
vendor provides full-time, on-site personnel for the performance of
all required administration and maintenance tasks.
The scope of services provided and requirements for system
reliability for full service tasks are the same as required during
the warranty period, and include all parts, labor, system hardware,
firmware, and software changes. Note the number of cells shaded to
indicate the vendor tasks (Table 1, page 62).
Table 3. Shared enterprise task allocation chart
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Shared Local Maintenance. Under this type of contract, there is
no requirement for a full-time, on-site vendor-provided system
administrator. The scope of services provided and requirements for
system reliability are modified to provide for locally performed
shared maintenance. Reliance upon the vendor is somewhat reduced as
reflected in the task allocation chart (Table 2, page 62) and, of
course, the cost of the contract.
Shared Enterprise Maintenance. Under an enterprise shared
maintenance agreement, reliance upon the vendor is further reduced
but the vendor remains directly engaged in the form of full-time
systems administrators or engineers being assigned to key locations
in the enterprise. They perform higher-level duties and act as
backup to the local and enterprise assets. In the case of a
large-scale PACS operation in support of a multi-facility
enterprise, this provides an effective mix in vendor expertise and
direct system interaction with the more cost-efficient use of
in-house resources (Table 3, page 64).
REVISED LIFE-CYCLE PLAN
After developing a set of task allocation charts, which develop
a phased reallocation of maintenance activities over a course of
years, a forecast of the entire life-cycle maintenance program can
be devised for the enterprise PACS. This plan is a key to
negotiating strategic maintenance contracts and planning resource
requirements across the enterprise. It also serves as an excellent
teaching tool for enterprise PACS users and managers to graphically
depict the local and enterprise PACS maintenance responsibilities
migration plan. Tables 1, 2, and 3 depict an example of a phased
maintenance plan that migrates from full vendor service to shared
local service to shared enterprise service.
Table 2. Shared local task allocation chart.
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The timing of the phases is based on the intended goals for
achievement of enterprise PACS support capabilities. It must be
mentioned that the cost savings predicted by this migration plan
should also be seen as an assumption of increased risk for
maintaining PACS-supported clinical services. A sober and realistic
assessment should be applied before committing to such a plan.
CONCLUSION
With the demonstrated proliferation of PACS and increases in
hospital mergers and partnerships, an increase in enterprise PACS
implementations is inevitable. Enterprise shared warranty and
maintenance programs present a systematic means of achieving more
effective and efficient PACS operations through development of
integrated support plans.
The goal of reducing enterprise cost can be fully appreciated
only if the clinical utility of a PACS is supported. Inefficient
PACS produces not only film, but also more expensive laser film.
Furthermore, untrusted and unreliable PACS operations cause
reliance on film-based operations, which, in a PACS environment,
should be used for backup and specialty printing operations
only.
Table 1. Full service task allocation chart. Includes quality control (QC), preventive maintenance (PM), calibration/configuration (Cal/Config), and minor maintenance tasks for vendor system administrator (SA), radiologists, vendor, biomedical staff, clinicians, and radiology department staff.
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PACS operations are the culmination of many upstream activities,
beginning with a clinical order flowing into a RIS schedule, to an
image acquisition, to a diagnostic read, in parallel with the
delivery of properly stored and networked bits and bytes of images
and patient data onto a properly calibrated display monitor. This
sequence of events relies on many service organizations and people,
from equipment users to radiology technologists, clinical
engineers, and physicists, and to system administrators and network
administrators. All of these people and activities come under the
umbrella of a PACS operations and maintenance program where
everybody knows their job and all organizations are resourced to
get the job done. This is why the linkage between operations,
quality control, and maintenance is needed. Without communication
between the major contributors of PACS operations, effective
services are an impossibility.
Additionally, failure to support the allocated maintenance and
QC tasks through in-house or contracted means will reduce the
efficiency of the maintenance program as well as the effectiveness
of PACS operations. Continuous failure to support scheduled QC and
maintenance tasks historically leads to more frequent and more
expensive repairs with the associated downtime. While a working
PACS is a great tool for a hospital or an entire enterprise, a
failing PACS is a clinical work-flow nightmare, with serious
clinical and business implications.
The task allocation chart is meant to be a dynamic reflection of
assignments. It can be used to show current and future program
structure. Any transition away from reliance on vendor resources
must be met with an equal assignment of tasks to other resources.
Each stakeholder in PACS operationsclinicians, technicians,
physicists, engineers, and administratorsmust provide constructive
effort and feedback to keep the PACS QC and maintenance program
effective. The PACS program manager's task is to keep the resources
and requirements balanced through the use of the enterprise QC and
maintenance program.
John Romlein is vice president, and John C. Weiser, PhD, is
chief scientist, Xtria Healthcare Digital Solutions, Frederick,
Md.
ADDITIONAL READING
Norton GS, Romlein J, Lyche DK, Richardson RR. The task
allocation chart: quality control of a picture archive and
communication system (PACS). In: Blaine G, Horii SC, eds. Medical
Imaging 1999: PACS Design and Evaluation: Engineering and
Clinical Issues. SPIE Proceedings. 1999; 3662:409413.
Romlein J. Reality check: QC in the digital department.
Decisions In Imaging Economics. 2002;15(5):18-24.
Romlein J, Norton GS, Lyche DK, Richardson RR. PACS:
acceptance test, quality control, warranty, and maintenance
continuum. In: Blaine G, Horii SC, eds. Medical Imaging 1999: PACS
Design and Evaluation: Engineering and Clinical Issues. SPIE
Proceedings. 1999;3662:111119.
Staley SD, Romlein JR, Chacko AK, Radvany M. Regional
maintenance approach for PACS within the healthcare enterprise. In:
Blaine GJ, Siegel EL, eds. Medical Imaging 2000: PACS Design and
Evaluation: Engineering and Clinical Issues. SPIE Proceedings.
2000;3980:437-446.