Panel discussionModerator: Eliot L. Siegel, MD
ELIOT L. SIEGEL, MD:
Thank you very much for your talks, Bob and Chris. They were really
both interesting and provocative. I’d like to start out on
something that Bob mentioned—ergonomics as a buzz word. If you
take a look at the definition of
ergonomics
, it comes from the Greek word
ergon
, meaning “work,” and from
nomos
, which is “natural laws.” Most people think about the physical and
physiologic aspects of ergonomics. But it’s a lot more than just
office furniture. If you take a look at the definition by the
International Ergonomics Association, they say that there are 3
subtypes. One is organizational, which we’ll set aside for just a
moment. The other is physical, which is the one that most people
pay attention to. Then the third one is cognitive. Cognitive
ergonomics actually focuses on human perception, human attention,
cognition, motor control, memory storage, and retrieval. I’d like
to ask both of you, in terms of things like perception and
attention and cognition, where do you see next-generation systems
going? Given that definition of ergonomics from a cognitive
perspective, what are you doing with your companies to try to help
us radiologists? We’re feeling increasing stress; we’ve talked
about how many studies we’re reading out. We’ve done some work in
our reading room to try to make a nice environment as far as the
lighting, sound, and ventilation. But what are you doing to
minimize my stress from a cognitive perspective, and to help in
terms of designing your systems? How are you approaching that?
BOB COOKE:
If you look at the cognitive side, there are some very simple
low-hanging fruit that we’re facing right now in terms of alignment
of human interfaces. We all talk about integration as being very
good; however, if you move from one user interface scheme to
another, there are all huge opportunities for improvement in terms
of the way the mouse moves, the way the icons work, the color
schemes of the application. These context switches between user
interfaces slow people down and I think they also add stress during
your work day. So very simply, in terms of even our product design,
we’re seeking to align our user interfaces and focus more on color
schemes that are more comfortable. We should try to take advantage
of these colors, because, as I think one of the presentations
mentioned, more and more monitors are now color. There are some
great opportunities to use color to flag a critical result or to
flag a critical task that might be upon you. I think this is really
the first area that we have to focus on as an industry, to look at
alignment of user interface design, and the color schemes that are
associated with those user interfaces.
SIEGEL:
Dr. Weiss mentioned that he really strongly prefers and recommends
that we spend as much of our time looking at the images rather than
looking at the reports as they’re being generated. I’d like to
expand on that from my perspective as a radiologist. I’d like to
look at the images as much as possible and spend as little time as
possible looking at pull-down menus or icons. So I would love to see
that as part of the ergonomic solution also. Chris, how are you
dealing with that?
CHRIS HAFEY:
Vital has always been very focused on usability and what we call
read flow, or the minimum number of clicks to actually deliver what
the user wants. We spend an incredible amount of time on it, mainly
because there are so many opportunities to actually improve the
read flow and the way the system works. I think it’s unique in the
sense that advanced visualization has such rich data to actually
automate things. By putting time into this, working with users, and
developing algorithms, we’re able to make it as simple as opening
an exam or study, drawing an arrow, and being done with it.
SIEGEL:
Have you been tempted to incorporate some PACS functionality into
your advanced visualization solution, for example, the ability to
mark a study as dictated or to integrate it with are porting
workflow?
HAFEY:
We do have a reporting module in our system that functions a little
bit differently than traditional radiology workflow. It has some
capabilities similar to that, but it’s actually a bit more
patient-focused in the sense that a lot of the output result is
targeted as something you can give directly to a patient,
specifically in cardiology, but in radiology, too. Taking things
like internal findings that we find in the system, capturing them
in a way that is understandable to a user, and even reusable in the
system in the future, when we load up maybe a follow-up case, for
example.
DAVID L. WEISS, MD:
I’d like to expand on the question Eliot asked regarding keeping
the radiologist’s eyes away from any pull-down menu and, even more
importantly, away from glancing at the keyboard to enter data or
make a request. On the 3D side, the conventional mouse now is
becoming inadequate in terms of a 3-dimensional image. There has
been some work with a 3-dimensional mouse. What are your companies
doing to incorporate some of those mechanical devices or even new
mechanical devices and concepts into the reading process?
SIEGEL:
In addition to just mapping those devices out to equivalent
mouseclick functions, but taking advantage of a greater level of
increased freedom?
WEISS:
Yes, or even more so. All of those devices were created to match
software, and then software was created to match those arguably
flawed devices. How about doing what the folks at Apple did, in
creating new hardware and new software matched to each other? In
other words, throwing everything out and starting over? What are
your thoughts on that?
COOKE:
I think we’ve got to breakdown a couple of different topics here.
Let’s first look at the issue associated with keeping your eyes on
the images. As radiology transforms itself from detection and
diagnosis to also now being involved in the follow-up,
communication, and collaboration with the physicians ordering the
exams, dealing with critical results and with that communication
and collaboration may require you to have notifications and alerts
inside of your diagnostic process that require you to be
involved.
Obviously from an ergonomic perspective, you should be in
control of when those things pop up and when they don’t. But from
time to time, it may be important that those issues pop up. They
may have to interrupt your reading process much the same way that
somebody comes and taps you on the shoulder to interrupt you during
your normal reading process.
The second thing is in terms of the 3D mouse. Obviously,
incorporation of basic 3D functions into the diagnostic workflow is
mandatory. In general, there are some great opportunities for PACS
systems and advanced visualization technologies to come together to
at least enhance the diagnostic process as it relates to
comparisons and synchronized ways to look through stacks of
thin-sliced data. I think there are some great opportunities
there.
In terms of integration with these external devices, one of the
nice choices we made early on in developing our system was to take
advantage of off-the-shelf operating system technologies and be
able to link these kinds of mouseclicks to operations within our
system. So our users are routinely using 7-button mice for
short-cuts, and mammography users are quite routinely using that
shuttle device that you mentioned.
SIEGEL:
How about Vital, Chris? Are you looking at other alternative input
devices to a mouse or track ball?
HAFEY:
Well, being on the engineering side, we absolutely love to look at
these things. They are exciting and interesting, and we think of
all sorts of interesting novel applications for them. None of them
have actually passed the usability test on the user side to
actually drive production. The other side of that is we’ve been
very successful with our automation algorithms to remove a lot of
the manual efforts of looking at these cases. We can quickly get
the user to point where they want to see exactly what they’re
looking for.
SIEGEL:
You mentioned the importance of training and the fact that there is
training available for the radiologists locally on-site. But we
have thousands of users, potentially, at the University of Maryland
or Department of Veterans Affairs. Do we have somebody train each
of them? Or have you looked at computer-based training or online
training possibilities as we move from the radiology department to
the entire enterprise?
HAFEY:
First of all, I would love to have our product be so usable that no
training is required at all. So you could walk in and immediately
start getting value out of it.
SIEGEL:
Like a video game.
HAFEY:
Like a video game, absolutely. I think, actually, the video game
industry is a fantastic model to learn about how they take a very
complex situation, like an online role-playing game. They engage
the user who can have success early and then later on become much
more advanced and they can pull capabilities out of it.
SIEGEL:
They don’t have to have a trainer come by your house to train your kid how to use a video game or even expect him or her to read the
user’s manual.
HAFEY:
Exactly. I think those types of paradigms are important to us. We
do actively think about how can we anticipate what the user might
want to do, make it very evident and clear to them, so they don't
have to go to the help manual. So they can walk into it without
ever having any experience and still get value out of it. That
being said, that’s primarily focused at a lot of what used to be
advanced and is now basic visualization. There are still advanced
things that require not just usability, like how do I use the
application, but clinically, what does this mean? What is this
procedure about? There are new procedures being invented with these
new scanners that require education, because you didn’t learn it
when you went to school.
STEVEN C. HORII, MD:
I actually have a comment about the gamers. If you think about it,
in some of these games you’re operating in 3D space, and you've got
6 degrees of freedom. You have translation in 3 dimensions and
rotation. Yet, the gamers do this. They fly around, shoot down
enemies, and do all kinds of manipulation things all at the same
time. They have an intuitive user interface, and it’s certainly
something that kids can grasp. We had an experience recently when
looking at a training issue and determined that when using an
advanced visualization system, a static paper manual is not good
enough. You really need to see how you interact. We had an
undergraduate working for us who found some available software that
allows us to capture all of the interaction as a movie. Then we can
save it as an AVI file or whatever. So we have built a whole set of
dynamic instruction files that go along with the paper manual. You
can look up a task: how do I do a colon fly-through? It will show
you. How did I do? We recorded an expert doing it and we can insert
a voice-over it to create a little instruction video. We’ve posted
those on our Web site. We were looking at our training, and it all
came out of work with this young undergraduate in biomedical
engineering who figured this out.
SIEGEL:
You’re looking at undergraduates. Dr. Chang and Paul Nagy mentioned
they are scouting ever earlier at the high school level!
HORII:
Yes, but it’s probably not a lot different in terms of what they
know about systems.
KHAN M. SIDDIQUI, MD:
I have a comment on what Chris suggested earlier. One of the
frustrations I have reading cardiac CT and cardiac MR cases is that
the available reporting solutions on workstations are designed for
cardiologists. Cardiologists love the idea of getting a report in a
structured format. But then I also have to incorporate that report
into my radiology information system (RIS). So, a lot of times, I'm
doing duplicate reporting, one for cardiology based on the
templates that are available in the cardiac workstation, and then
again on the RIS. Is there any effort to integrate the reporting
systems so we just have to report once using speech recognition?
There is hardly anybody doing integration of advanced workstations
with speech recognition systems to take advantage of reporting
flexibility. If I’m reading cardiac CTs all day long on the
workstation, because I can't do it on PACS, how do I look at prior
studies? How do I look at prior reports? Currently I see a lag in
existing technologies that can provide unified workflow. Can you
comment on the future of how to integrate reporting and how to make
the workflow much more feasible when you compare prior studies and
prior reports from contextually relevant other studies?
HAFEY:
That's a great question and there are multiple aspects to it. First
of all, advanced visualization has traditionally been
volume-focused, not longitudinal or comparator review-focused. There
are definitely some very exciting opportunities in advanced
visualization that you’ll see more of in the future. One of the
challenges, though, is who does comparator review? It’s the PACS
system. There’s a disconnect in the interface between PACS and
advanced visualization. At best, what we can do is get launched by
URL with a patient ID. So I think you need to create a tighter
integration between the two so we can get context about what priors
are available for this patient. Taking the advanced position, next
step, then we look for the findings in those priors and how they
relate to current procedures. Then we actually try to augment even
further. There are an incredible amount of opportunities there.
In the report data itself, there are a lot of opportunities to
get more up to speed with current IT infrastructure in terms of
HL-7 and getting reports out and interfacing them to the RIS. We
have developed technologies to expose our internal data structure
to Web services. These are not difficult to do. It’s a matter of
people wanting to do it and pushing it through. A number of
customers are doing that right now.
PAUL G. NAGY, PhD:
I have a question. There are large cultural differences between
radiologists, physicians, and IT developers. Sometimes we see this
in the products, in that some products might not make sense or
upgrades might have issues. So what efforts do you take to put the
radiologists into the mind of a developer?
COOKE:
As an example, forums like this are extremely valuable and
critical. The good news is the human body is the same across the
world, and the good news is that most radiology practices, believe
it or not, around the world, are very similar in the way exams are
interpreted. On one hand, as a global developer, we have a great
opportunity in terms of interaction with our users and not having
to worry about designing multiple different systems to solve
multiple different problems. We’re really only solving one problem,
which is the good news.
The second thing is that you have to think about it from a
couple of different perspectives. Obviously, the radiologist needs
to generate a quality result and struggles with keeping quality and
efficiency. Then there’s the radiologist who is a business person
trying to advance his or her practice. We have to interact with
each and every one of those kinds of roles. In some cases, they're
all the same; in many cases, they’re different sets of players. For
example, we recently went down to one of our large reading group
users and we spent the weekend essentially working with their
radiologists, looking at the whole “click-ology”to try to remove
clicks from the process. We looked for opportunities for automation
to determine how we could improve the efficiency.
We’re all talking about how advanced visualization can be
incorporated into the diagnostic process. That’s great and will
help with efficiency. But, at the end of the day, there's still a
whole lot of stuff right inside your basic PACS that are also great
opportunities for efficiency improvement.
SIEGEL:
How does Vital handle that challenge?
HAFEY:
I’d say a big part of the success there is culture. You have to
hire developers and train them. You have to establish a culture
that says it’s important to understand the end-user and to go above
and beyond to get there. We send our developers on-site on a
regular basis to talk to users, get feedback, see what's going
wrong, and see how are they working. We also have an extensive
output program, so as we develop new features, we develop agile
methods to get the best result possible. In the end, I think you’re
taking a world that is extremely complex—the radiology informatics
area-with another world that is extremely complex—technology. You
just need to have the right developers on staff who will go home at
night and keep up on the latest technologies, read Aunt Minnie, and
understand what’s going on.
SIEGEL:
Thanks. I'd like to thank all of our participants for an incredibly
interesting discussion, and for underscoring the tremendous
importance of imaging informatics, both in the way we practice
radiology today and in shaping the future of diagnostic imaging.
Thank you all very much.