• Abdominal imaging · Jul 2000

    Update on digital image management and PACS.

    • O Ratib, Y Ligier, D Bandon, and D Valentino.
    • Department of Radiology, University of California at Los Angeles School of Medicine, 90095-1721, USA.
    • Abdom Imaging. 2000 Jul 1;25(4):333-40.

    AbstractInformation technology is becoming a vital component of all health care enterprises, from managed care services to large hospital networks, that provides the basis of electronic patient records and hospital-wide information. The rationale behind such systems is deceptively simple: physicians want to sit down at a single workstation and call up all information, both clinical data and medical images, concerning a given patient. Picture archiving and communication systems (PACS) are responsible for solving the problem of acquiring, transmitting, and displaying radiologic images. The major benefit of PACS resides in its ability to communicate images and reports to referring physicians in a timely and reliable fashion. With the changes in economics and the shift toward managed and capitated care, the teleradiology component of PACS is rapidly gaining momentum. In allowing remote coverage of multiple sites by the same radiologists and remote consultations and expert opinion, teleradiology is in many instances the only option to maintain economically viable radiologic settings. The technical evolution toward more integrated systems and the shift toward Web-based technology is rapidly merging the two concepts of PACS and teleradiology in global image management and communication systems.

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