| By RealWire News Distribution | Article Rating: |
|
| December 3, 2009 11:45 AM EST | Reads: |
903 |
With "meaningful use" and "interoperability" emerging as key concepts in current discussions about health information technology, forward-looking healthcare leaders are compelled to seek solutions designed specifically to deliver optimal access to data generated by diverse systems across their enterprises, notes Tony Cotterill, President and CEO of BridgeHead Software, a leading developer of healthcare data management software.
"Nowhere is this need - or this challenge - reflected more clearly than in the field of radiology," he adds, pointing to the broad spectrum of imaging modalities and data management issues currently being discussed at the annual Radiology Society of North America (RSNA) in Chicago. "More and more hospitals are relying upon multiple PACS systems to capture and present images for clinical review. While vital to quality patient care, this diversity raises a host of challenges related to long-term storage, retrieval and access to images."
To address this need, increasing numbers of healthcare organizations are evaluating enterprise imaging (EI) projects to create a central archive enabling universal access and streamlined data management. KLAS, in fact, recently issued a report on the topic, noting that many hospitals initially looked towards their PACS vendors to help fulfill this vision of EI. However, no single PACS vendor crosses all imaging departments, the report notes, causing hospitals to investigate PACS-neutral archives and storage management. This model would allow hospitals to implement best-of-breed PACS systems to meet the divergent clinical viewing requirements of various imaging-intense specialty departments such as interventional radiology and nuclear medicine. At the same time, agnostic archive and storage management functionality would allow healthcare organizations to move imaging data into the domain of the IT department.
BridgeHead Software offers a unique product set to advance hospital efforts to achieve EI: its recently released HEAT appliance combined with time-tested BH PACStore functionality. HEAT - or Heterogeneous Enterprise Archive Technology, developed with Sun Microsystems - provides seamless integration with PACS, health information systems (HIS) and electronic health records (EHR) systems to deliver centralized access to healthcare data. Additionally, BH PACStore provides long-term storage and retrieval of PACS imaging data to create a cost-effective DICOM storage infrastructure.
"We're confident that our offerings address many of the obstacles the industry currently faces," Cotterill says. "It's clear that no single PACS system meets all needs. And healthcare leaders must keep in mind that a PACS vendor's objective is to encourage widespread adoption of its technology - not necessarily to ensure that a hospital's imaging data management needs are met as effectively as possible." The agnostic approach offered by BridgeHead, on the other hand, supports optimal use of PACS while streamlining image data management, simplifying migration tasks, and reducing storage and archival costs.
"The net result," he adds, "is that imaging can be fully integrated and easily accessible throughout the care continuum, accelerating an organization's progress towards meaningful use and streamlined data sharing."
Published December 3, 2009 Reads 903
Copyright © 2009 Ulitzer, Inc. — All Rights Reserved.
Syndicated stories and blog feeds, all rights reserved by the author.
More Stories By RealWire News Distribution
RealWire is a global news release distribution service specialising in the online media. The RealWire approach focuses on delivering relevant content to the receivers of our client's news releases. As we know that it is only through delivering relevance, that influence can ever be achieved.
- The Busy Executive’s SOA Reference Guide
- Using Social Media in Your Business: Strategic or Tactical?
- The Need for Speed – and Big, Fat, Dumb Pipes
- F5 Improves Customers’ IT Infrastructure Agility
- 3 Universal Truths about Enabling the IaaS Market
- GoAdv Acquires Italy's Top Blog Network Blogosfere
- Cloud Computing in Developing Countries
- NuMobile, Inc. CEO Jim Tilton Presents 2010 $20 Million Revenue Objective in NewMarket Greenfield Partners Virtual Town Hall Videocast Released Today
- Intacct Extends Leadership in Cloud Financial Management With Intacct Winter 2010
- The Association of Independent Colleges and Universities of Pennsylvania (AICUP), Provista and Unimarket Announce the Launching of the AICUP Procurement Portal
- NuMobile, Inc. 2010 Virtual Town Hall Featuring Recent Acquisitions to Be Released This Friday
- NewMarket Technology, Inc. New CEO Noller to Present 2010 $150 Million Profitable Revenue Outlook and Plan to Get Company on OTCBB on Way to National Exchange
- IBM to Deliver Healthcare via Cloud Computing
- The Busy Executive’s SOA Reference Guide
- Using Social Media in Your Business: Strategic or Tactical?
- Samsung Unveils New Lineup of HDTVs at CES
- Social Media & Haiti
- esXpress VMware Backup Free Download
- ClickInsights: Mistakes to Avoid in Copy Used for Lead Generation
- The Need for Speed – and Big, Fat, Dumb Pipes
- F5 Improves Customers’ IT Infrastructure Agility
- 3 Universal Truths about Enabling the IaaS Market
- GoAdv Acquires Italy's Top Blog Network Blogosfere
- Cloud Computing in Developing Countries
- iPhone OS 3.0 Hits the Streets Today
- iPhone Able to Be Adopted by Enterprise Businesses
- i(Phone) Have My Data Here, Now I Want It There...What's the Problem?
- SAP & Sybase: Transforming Today's Mobile Workforce
- Seven Steps to the iPhone Developer's World
- What Hardware Changes Will iPhone OS 3.0 Bring?
- Five Free Mashup Tools You Should Know About
- Six Reasons Why Your Blog Is Your Most Important Social Media Tool
- Steve Jobs & the New iPhone?
- Securing and Delivering Business Data on the iPhone
- Close Encounters of the 3.0 iPhone Kind
- Stanford University iPhone Training Reaches 1M Downloads





















Ulitzer content is offered under Creative Commons "Attribution Non-Commercial No Derivatives" License.
For any reuse or distribution, you must make clear to others the license terms of this work.
The best way to do this is with a link to this web page.
Any of the above conditions can be waived if you get written permission from Ulitzer, Inc., the copyright holder.
Nothing in this license impairs or restricts the author's moral rights.