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Title: DIGITAL REVOLUTION IN IMAGING


1

DIGITAL REVOLUTION IN IMAGING HIS/RIS/PACS
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DIGITAL REVOLUTION IN IMAGING.HIS/RIS/PACS
  • Advances in digital technology, particularly in
    the fields of computing, imaging and
    communication, have progressed to the point that
    it is now possible to acquire medical images in
    digital form, archive them on computers systems,
    and display them in diagnostic quality. The
    display monitor used to present images can be at
    an adjacent or distant location to the original
    point of acquisition .

3
DIGITAL REVOLUTION IN IMAGING HIS/RIS/PACS
  • In radiology, the report is the king. An
    exquisitely designed facility, friendly and
    knowledgeable Radiographers, state of the art
    modalities, and world-class radiologists mean
    little if a patient's diagnostic report does not
    make it back to the referring physician in a
    timely manner.
  • ByJonathan S. Batchelor.

4
WHAT IS HOSPITAL INFORMATION SYSTEM. (HIS)
  • HIS is a computerized management system for
    handling three categories of tasks in a health
    care environment.
  • 1. It supports clinical and medical patient care
    activities in the hospital.
  • 2. It administers the hospital's daily business
    transactions.
  • 3.It evaluates hospital performances and costs
    etc.
  • H.K.Huang et al

5
WHAT IS RADIOLOGY INFORMATION SYSTEM. (RIS)
  • RIS is a computerized management system designed
    to support both administrative and clinical
    operation of the Radiology department, to reduce
    administrative overheads, and to improve the
    quality of radiological examination service. It
    therefore manages general radiology patient
    information, from scheduling to examination to
    reporting. Its equipment consists of a computer
    system with peripheral devices such as RIS
    workstations, printers and bar code readers etc.
  • It maintains many types of patient and
    examination related information. Patient related
    information includes medical, administrative,
    patient demographics and billing information.
    Examination related information includes
    procedural descriptions, and scheduling,
    diagnostic reporting, patient arrival
    documentation, image location, image movement
    and examination room scheduling
  • Its major tasks are as follows
  • 1.Process patient and film (image) folder
    records.
  • 2.Monitor patient status, examinations and
    examination resources.
  • 3.Schedules radiological examinations.
  • 4.Creates,formats and store diagnostic reports
    with digital signatures.
  • 5. Tracks image folders.
  • 6. It performs profile and statistical analysis.
  • 7.Maintains timely billing information.
  • H.K.Huang et al

6
WHAT IS PACS
  • Picture Archiving and Communication System (PACS)
    comprises data storage devices, image display
    devices, database management software and links
    to image/or image data acquisition devices,
    connected by computer networks.
  • The major components of PACS are
  • Image and data acquisition gateways There are
    two types of gateways to the PACS server and
    archive, the data base gate way for textual data
    and the image acquisition gateway for imaging
    data.
  • A PACS server and archive Their major functions
    are
  • Receipt of images via acquisition gateways.
  • Extraction of text information via data base gate
    way .
  • Update the database management system.
  • Determine the destination workstations to which
    newly generated exams are to be forwarded.
  • Retrieve necessary old patient images.
  • Interface PACS application servers.

7
PACS BENEFITS
  • Improved image reporting.

8
PACS BENEFITS
  • Easy access to patient images.

9
PACS BENEFITS
  • Reduced image storage space.

10
PACS BENEFITS
  • Eliminated number of lost x-ray films.
  • Improved patient turnaround time.
  • Reduced number of printed x-ray films.

11
PACS BENEFITS
  • No Darkroom and photographic chemicals.

12
PACS BENEFITS
  • Improved image workflow.
  • Film Based PACS Based
  • Study scheduled. Study scheduled
  • Study Scanned. Study Scanned.
  • Films printed.
  • Films send to Radiologist inbox
  • Films hung on light box.
  • Radiologist Reviews images. Radiologist Reviews
    images
  • Radiologist dictates report. Radiologist
    dictates report.
  • Report is typed. Report is finalized
  • Report is reviewed
  • Report is finalized.

13
COMMUNICATION ENABLERS IN HIS/RIS/PACS
  • Transmission of images and textual information
    between healthcare information systems has
    always been difficult for two reasons. first,
    information systems use different computer
    platforms, and second, images and data are
    generated from various imaging modalities by
    different manufacturers. With the emergent
    healthcare industry standards, Health level 7
    (HL7) and Digital Imaging and Communications in
    Medicine (DICOM), it has become feasible to
    integrate all these heterogeneous, disparate
    medical images and textual data into an organized
    system.
  • Interfacing two healthcare components requires
    two ingredients a common data format and a
    communication protocol. HL7 is a standard textual
    data format, whereas DICOM includes data format
    and communication protocols. In conforming to the
    HL7 standard, It is possible to share healthcare
    information between the hospital information
    systems (HIS), the radiology information systems
    (RIS), and PACS. By adapting the DICOM standard,
    medical images generated from a variety of
    modalities and manufacturers can be interfaced as
    an integrated healthcare system.

14
THE HEALTH LEVEL 7 (HL7) STANDARD
  • Health Level 7 (HL7), established in March 1987,
    was organized by a committee to develop a
    standard
  • for electronic data exchange in health care
    environments, particularly for hospital
    applications. In the HL7 standard, the basic data
    unit is a message. Each message is composed of
    multiple segments in a defined sequence. Each
    segment contains multiple data fields and is
    identified by a unique, predefined
    three-character code. The first segment is the
    message header segment with the three-letter code
    MSH, which defines the intent, source,
    destination, and some other relevant information
    such as message control identification and time
    stamp. The other segments are event dependent.
    Within each segment, related information is
    bundled together based on the HL7 protocol. A
    typical message, such as patient admission, may
    contain the following segments
  • MSHMessage header segment
  • EVNEvent type segment
  • PIDPatient identification segment
  • NK1Next of kin segment
  • PV1Patient visit segment

15
THE HEALTH LEVEL 7 (HL7) STANDARD
  • When an event occurs, such as patient admission,
    discharge, or transfer (ADT),the HIS would
    initiate an unsolicited message to the RIS that
    takes charge of the next event. If the message is
    in HL7 format, the RIS parses the message,
    updates its local database automatically, and
    sends a confirmation to the HIS Otherwise, a
    "rejected" message would be sent instead.

16
THE HEALTH LEVEL 7 (HL7) MESSAGE EXAMPLE
  • (1) Message header segment
  • MSH STOREHOLLYWOODMIMEVERMONT2003051810071se
    curity
  • ADTJMSG00201 ltCRgt
  • (2) Event type segment
  • EVN 101 12003051810051 ltCRgt
  • (3) Patient identification segment
  • PID PATID12345671 DoeAJohnABAII 19470701
    M C
  • 272 INDUSTRIAL STANDARDS (HL7 AND DICOM) AND IHE
  • 3976 Sunset BlvdALos Angeles ACAA90027
    323-681-2888ltCRgt
  • (4) Next of kin segment
  • NK1 !DoeALindaAEwifeltCRgt
  • (5) Patient visit segment
  • PV1 11 111100A345A0100135ASMITHAWILLIAMAKSU
    RADM
  • ltCRgt

17
THE HEALTH LEVEL 7 (HL7) MESSAGE EXAMPLE
  • Combining these five segments, these messages
    translate to"Patient John B. Doe,II, male,
    Caucasian, born on July 1, 1947, lives in Los
    Angeles, was admitted on May l8, 2003 at 1005
    a.m. by Doctor William K. Smith (00135) for
    surgery. The patient has been assigned to Room
    345, bed 01 on nursing unit l00.The next of kin
    is Linda E. Doe, wife. The ADT (admission,
    discharge, and transfer) message 201 was sent
    from system STORE at the Hollywood site to system
    MIME at the Vermont site on the same date two
    minutes after the admit."

18
DICOM STANDARD
  • ACR-NEMA, formally known as the American College
    of Radiology and the National Electrical
    Manufacturers Association, created a committee to
    develop a set of standards to serve as the common
    ground for various medical imaging equipment
    vendors. The goal was that newly developed
    instruments be able to communicate and
    participate in sharing medical image information,
    in particular, within the PACS environment. The
    committee, which focused chiefly on issues
    concerning information exchange,
    interconnectivity, and communications among
    medical systems, began work in 1982.
  • The first version, which emerged in
    1985,specified standards in point-to-point
    message transmission, data formatting, and
    presentation and included a preliminary set of
    communication commands and a data format
    dictionary. The second version, ACR-NEMA 2.0,
    published in 1988,was an enhancement to the first
    release. It included both hardware definitions
    and software protocols, as well as a standard
    data dictionary. Networking issues were not
    addressed adequately in either version. For this
    reason a new version aiming to include network
    protocols was released in 1992. Because of the
    magnitude of changes and additions, it was given
    a new name Digital Imaging and Communications in
    Medicine (DICOM 3.0). In 1996 a new version was
    released consisting of 13 published parts that
    form the basis of future DICOM new versions and
    parts.

19
DICOM STANDARD
  • Manufacturers readily adopted this version to
    their imaging products. Each DICOM document is
    identified by title and standard number in the
    form PS 3.X-YYYY where "X" is the part number
    and "YYYY" is the year of publication. Thus PS
    3.1-1996 means DICOM 3.0 document part 1
    (Introduction and Overview)released in 1996.
    Although the complexity and involvement of the
    standards were increased by many fold, DICOM
    remains compatible with the previous ACR-NEMA
    versions. The two most distinguished new features
    in DICOM are adaptation of the object-oriented
    data model for message exchange and utilization
    of existing standard network communication
    protocols.

20
DICOM DOCUMENT
  • The current DICOM standard PS 3.1-2008 includes
    18 related but independent parts following the
    ISO (International Standardization Organization)
    directives andare referred to as
  • Part 1 Introduction and Overview
  • Part 2 Conformance
  • Part 3 Information Object Definitions
  • Part 4 Service Class Specifications
  • Part 5 Data Structures and Encoding
  • Part 6 Data Dictionary
  • Part 7 Message Exchange
  • Part 8 Network-Communication Support for Message
    Exchange
  • Part 9 Point-to-Point Communication Support for
    Message Exchange (Retired)
  • Part 10 Media Storage and File Format for Media
    Interchange
  • Part 11 Media Storage Application Profiles
  • Part 12 Media Formats and Physical
    Media-for-Media Interchange
  • Part 13 Print Management Point-to-Point
    Communication Support (Retired)
  • Part 14 Gray Scale Standard Display Function
  • Part 15 Security and System Management Profiles
  • Part 16 Content Mapping Resource
  • Part 17 Explanatory Information Part 18 Web
    Access to DICOM Persistent Objects (WADO)

21
INTERGRATING HEALTHCARE ENTERPRISE (IHE)
  • IHE is not a standard nor a certifying authority
    instead it is a high-level information model for
    driving adoption of HL7 and DICOM standards. IHE
    is a joint initiative of RSNA '(Radiological
    Society of North America) and HIMSS (Healthcare
    Information and Management Systems Society)
    started in 1998. The mission was to define and
    stimulate manufacturers to use DICOM and
    HL-7-compliant equipment and information systems
    to facilitate daily clinical operation.
  • The first large-scale demonstration was held at
    the RSNA annual meeting in 1999, and thereafter
    at RSNA in 2000 and 2001, at HIMSS in 2001and
    2002, and annually since at RSNA. In these
    demonstrations manufacturers came together to
    show how their products could be integrated
    together according to IHE protocols. It is the
    belief of RSNA and HIMSS that with successful
    adoption of IHE, life would become more pleasant
    in healthcare systems integration for both the
    users and the providers.
  • The IHE(Connectethon) developed technical
    framework which defines a common information
    model and vocabulary for using DICOM and HL7 to
    complete a set of well-defined radiological and
    clinical transactions for a certain task.

22
INTERGRATING HEALTHCARE ENTERPRISE (IHE)
  • There are three key concepts in the IHE technical
    framework data model, actors, and integration
    profiles.
  • Data Model
  • The data model is adapted from HL-7 and DICOM and
    shows the relationships between the key frames of
    reference, for example, patient, visit, order,
    and study defined in the framework.
  • IHE Actor
  • An actor is one that exchanges messages with
    other actors to achieve specific tasks or
    transactions. An actor, not necessarily a person,
    is defined at the enterprise level in generic,
    product-neutral terms.
  • Integration Profile An integration profile is the
    organization of functions segmented into discrete
    units. It includes actors and transactions
    required to address a particular clinical task or
    need. An example is the scheduled workflow
    profiles, which incorporate all the process steps
    in a typical scheduled patient encounter from
    registration, ordering, image acquisition, and
    examination to viewing.
  • IHE integration profiles provide a common
    language, vocabulary, and platform for healthcare
    providers and manufacturers to discuss
    integration needs and the integration
    capabilities of products. IHE integration
    profiles started first in the domain of
    radiology. During the 2003 implementation there
    were 12 radiology integration profiles.

23
ARE YOU STILL AWAKE
24
SECURITY ISSUES
25
WITHOUT MAKE-UP
  • PATIENTS ALLOW HEALTHCARE STAFF TO COLLATE
    PERSONAL INFORMATION RELATED TO THEIR TREATMENT,
    BUT THEY DO SO IN CONFIDENCE WITH THE EXPECTATION
    THAT SUCH INFORMATION IS KEPT CONFIDENT AND THEIR
    PRIVACY IS RESPECTED

26
SECURITY ISSUES
  • Computer security experts agree that the weakest
    link in the security chain is the system's users.
  • Confidentiality of Patient Data.Confidentiality
    is breached when information provided in
    confidence by one person to another is disclosed
    to a third party without the consent of the
    provider of the information
  • .Data Integrity.
  • Develop clearly written security policies.

27
SECURITY ISSUES
  • Having passwords assigned to users will almost
    guarantee unauthorized access to patient
    information.
  • Passwords should also be changed on a quarterly
    basis and should be non-generic.
  • Passwords should not be lying around at the
    workstation or on sticky notes.
  • An automatic log off functionality after an
    elapsed time frame.

28
HIS/RIS/PACS DEPLOYMENT
  • Develop a PACS team.
  • Team members
  • Representatives of referring medical disciplines
    in the hospital e.g. Orthopedics
  • Representatives from IT department.
  • Medical Physicists.
  • Radiologist.
  • Project manager.
  • Financial management rep.
  • Radiographer/s.
  • Terms of reference of the team.
  • Analysis of workflows.
  • Financial acquisition models.
  • Analysis of the work volumes and equipment.
  • Develop Quality assurance protocols .
  • Prepare a PACS Plan.
  • Develop a business case.
  • Develop and evaluate requests for proposal.

29
CONCLUSION
  • Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate.
    Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond
    measure. It is our light, not our darkness that
    frightens us. We ask ourselves, who am I to be
    brilliant, gorgeous, talented and fabulous?
    Actually, who are you not to be?
  • Marianne Williamson.

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REFERENCES
  • Auntminnie.com.
  • Anthology of PACS. Michael.J.Canavo.
  • Integrating the Healthcare Enterprise (IHE)
    Radiology user's handbook.
  • IHE technical framework Volumes 1 and 2.
  • Beginners guide to VPN on PACS.
    www.pasa.nhs.uk/cep
  • Beginners guide to PACS. www.pasa.nhs.uk/cep
  • A guide to the Digital revolution. Second
    Edition. Keith.J..Dreyer.
  • PACS and Imaging informatics Basic principles and
    Applications. H.K.Huang.
  • Buyers guide to PACS workstations.
    www.pasa.nhs.uk/cep

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THANK YOU
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