Tuesday, February 12, 2013
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Why the VNA is the backbone of any enterprise imaging strategy

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By Scott Whyte

 

HIMSS 2013 is around the corner. With it comes an onslaught of technology jargon and buzzwords, all in the name of providing quality healthcare. When you’re the fifth-largest health system in the country, you’d better be known for clinical excellence as opposed to jargon. We’re constantly striving for compassionate, affordable, quality health services, but good intentions aren’t enough. Staying ahead of the game is a full-time job. 

 

We are a multi-state provider, so it’s important for our employees to be able to share information as if they were just down the hall from each other. When it comes to images, which are central to diagnosis, we couldn’t just “wing it” with our various stakeholders. An analysis of our workflow led us to conclude that we needed (wait for the buzzword) an enterprise imaging strategy. But what goes into that kind of strategy?

 

We decided that if we had to start somewhere, then installing vendor-neutral archives (VNAs) and managing this system as images got added and stored would become a must. We could centralize all image data and meet regulatory requirements by replicating to a secondary location. Last year, we processed 3.25 million studies through our VNA, and we now house all our radiology and cardiology images – about 1.5 petabytes worth!

 

Our next challenge was electronic availability of images. In the past, images had to be burned to CD’s, given to the patient or courier, and then provided to the physician. Not exactly 21st-century best practices — and expensive to boot!  With a VNA in place, we added applications to enable image streaming and exchange capabilities. We can now provide electronic access to medical images on mobile and traditional devices and make them available to our referring physicians through exchange or our image enabled HIE. We believe this will assist in the effort to reduce duplicate imaging. The result is a more organized workflow, streamlined day-to-day operations and a solid enterprise imaging strategy.

 

We’ve only just begun transforming the way we engage patients and physicians, but bedrocks such as a VNA ensure we have a solid foundation. 

 

What are your thoughts on VNA?

 

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Professional biography: Scott Whyte is Vice President of IT Connectivity at Dignity Health. His role includes leading Dignity Health’s investment in physician EMRs, clinical integration/accountable care organizations, ARRA, healthcare reform, patient connectivity, telemedicine, and health information exchanges (HIEs).

 

 

Posted by cristen bolan at 02/12/2013 10:48:57 AM | 


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