Tuesday, December 18, 2012
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Radiology’s resolutions for 2013

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By Barbara Dumery


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As we say "so long" to 2012 and welcome in 2013, I thought it was only appropriate that we start thinking about our resolutions for the New Year. While my personal resolutions will be focused around spending more time with my family, going to bed before midnight and waking up early and exercising (see #2), there are also resolutions that we as an industry should be aligning with to help support radiology in the move from fee-for-service to a value-based reimbursement model. Some of those 2013 resolutions or ‘initiatives’ should include:

 

 

     Orient yourself to the downstream benefits – A radiologist’s worth is determined by the quality of information and the time-savings that information provides within the continuum of the larger patient care cycle. For this reason, radiologists must focus on creating reports that offer actionable information in a timely fashion. Technologies like templates and speech recognition can help radiologists arm referring physicians with the information they need to provide quality and efficient patient care.

 

 

 

     Provide patient-centric service – Due to the shift to Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs), a patient choosing to get their services elsewhere will have a significant impact on costs for that ACO. To ensure that patients choose to stay within their ACO provider organizations, imaging centers will need to provide more patient-centric services, such as more accommodating facilities (almost spa-like) and patient portals for things like easy and convenient scheduling, and faster results (with the opportunity for the patient to ask questions).

     Get real on radiation dose exposure – Whether you’re in a state where regulation requires your facility to include the patient’s radiation dose exposure in the report or not, the effects of over exposure are real and need to be managed. Start looking at what is being done in California and find ways to implement those practices into your own facilities. Learn what radiation dose management solutions they are using and determine which ones will best support your existing radiology reporting workflow – seamless integration is key.

     Learn about ICD-10 impact – The U.S. healthcare system will be transitioning to ICD-10 in October 2014 and with these new codes, the amount of information required to properly document care in order to be appropriately reimbursed increases dramatically. Imaging facilities will have to acquire a much greater history for a patient when scheduling an exam for the purposes of precertification, dictation, and subsequent billing. Radiologists must also be much more specific and detailed in their documentation.

 

 

Do you have some additional resolutions for the radiology industry? Share them in the comments section below.

 

Professional Biography:

Barbara Dumery is the Director of Diagnostics Solutions Marketing at Nuance Communications. She joined Nuance in 2006 and has over 15 years of experience in healthcare IT. Nuance Healthcare is the market leader in providing clinical understanding solutions that accurately capture and transform the patient story into meaningful, actionable information. Prior to joining Nuance, Barbara was the Senior Product Manager at eMed Technologies. She graduated from Tufts University in ’95 with a BSEE in Electrical Engineering and in ’97 with an MSEE in Electrical Engineering, Biomedical Engineering.

 

 

 

Posted by Kieran Anderson at 12/18/2012 03:48:59 PM | 


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