C. Douglas Phillips, MD, FACR

Professor of Radiology

Director of Head & Neck Imaging

Weill College of Cornell University

NewYork Presbyterian Hospital

Dr. Phillips is a member of the 

Applied Radiology Advisory Board

Monday, October 08, 2012
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How many is too many?

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By C. Douglas Phillips, MD, FACR

 

Second topic. I am going to go out on a limb here, and imagine that most of you read in a PACS environment. You know, cold and sterile? No, computers.  Lots of bright monitors, and microphones and telephones, and light pencils, and lasers, and dim lights, comfortable chairs, strong support staff, and an IT department that Apple has been trying to hire away. Right?  Huh?  You don’t?  Well, don’t feel special. Neither do I. We will visit PACS a lot, I’m thinking, but for now, I ask a simple mechanical/layout question. Do you like one monitor to read from?  Two? Three? Four? Are there any people out there who have more than four?  If so, let me know.  I’ve been wondering where all the money is going.


I am pretty simple about the whole concept.  I am a man of simple means, and a small brain.  I can only look at one image at a time. I can compare it to another image, or maybe two. I have a colleague who wants all the images for a single study up, linked, and all dancing at the same time. It makes me sick to my stomach. I’m trying to look HERE, and everything in my peripheral vision is moving. Too much to deal with. So, how do you like to read? Single monitor? More?And if you have a peripheral monitor (non-PACS), what’s on it?  Cool screensavers? The latest episode of “Breaking Bad”?


Professional Biography: C. Douglas Phillips, MD, FACR, is a Professor of Radiology, Director of Head and Neck Imaging, at Weill Medical College of Cornell University, New York–Presbyterian Hospital, New York, NY. He is a member of the Applied Radiology Editorial Advisory Board.

Posted by cristen bolan at 10/08/2012 09:52:54 AM | 


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