|
Teleradiology
Service Providers, 1996
Working from the extensive databases at the
Telemedicine Information Exchange and Telemedicine Today, we compiled a
list of what we felt were the most prominent U.S.-based teleradiology groups,
and surveyed them about their activities. We were most interested in groups
that are doing diagnostic interfacility teleradiology, as opposed to PACS
teleradiology within an institution, or interim-read telearadiology. This is
largely because interim-read teleradiology to physicians homes, for
off-hour preliminary reads, has become so common that it would be nearly
impossible to ferret out all of these deployments. Also, we felt that
diagnostic reads are a reasonable bellwether of teleradiology trends, since
only these are reimbursed. We do not pretend that this is an exhaustive
accounting of teleradiology service providers. However, we do feel that
weve contacted a majority of the most significant teleradiology practices
that are interpreting remote, transmitted radiographs.
Internet
Teleradiology: The Other PACS
Teleradiology is the most widely deployed application
of telemedicine. In use since the late 1950s, teleradiology is the
"granddaddy" tele-imaging application. Numerous definitive studies (see Twenty
Selected Teleradiology References, Vol. 4, no. 2) have shown that transmitted
radiographic images (with the possible exception of mammograms; see
Telemammography Feasibility, Vol. 4, no. 2) can be displayed on a remote
monitor and interpreted with diagnostic reliability. In the past year
teleradiology, which refers to the transmission of images between enterprises,
has begun to integrate with PACS (Picture Archive and Communication Systems),
which refers to image acquisition, management, and transmission within a single
enterprise. The lines have been blurring as health care institutions link
together their far-flung affiliate hospitals and clinics.
Decision Making for Teleradiology: An Interview with
Dr. Jim Logan
Jim Logan, M.D. is President of Logan &
Associates, Inc., one of the original telemedicine consulting firms. Their
client list includes numerous public/private, rural/urban hospital-based health
care delivery systems. In addition, they have provided services to medical
organizations in Russia, Japan, Australia, Iceland, Scotland, France, Germany,
Canada, Guam, South Korea, and the Peoples Republic of China. Dr. Logan
completed a NASA-sponsored residency in Aerospace Medicine and is
board-certified in the specialty. Since last August, he has served as the
Telemedicine Clinical Director for the U.S. military's Pacific Regional Program
Office (PRPO) based at Tripler Army Medical Center in Honolulu, HI. PRPO is a
consolidation of the AKAMAI Telemedicine Project and PACMEDNET. One of his
interests is finding low-cost ways of providing diagnostic teleradiology
services throughout the Pacific Basin, a sparsely populated area that covers
roughly a third of the planet's surface.
Cutting Edge Internet Teleradiology from 9 Leading
Vendors
These nine companies (and there are surely more we
havent identified) have committed significant resources to porting their
technologies to Internet protocols. It is a gamble for all of them. Not because
the Internet isnt going to deliver on its promise. It is. The problem is
that by its nature the Internet thrives under open standards, and no one has
figured out how to make much money by developing a nonproprietary product. One
strategy will likely be to use Internet capabilities as a "loss leader" bundled
into a much larger package of information systems products.
A Telemedicine
Primer
In an ideal world, there would be a radiologist
constantly available at every facility capable of taking radiographs. In
practice, this is not feasible. The traditional solution was to transport the
X-ray film to the radiologist for reporting, or to use the services of a
visiting radiologist ('circuit rider'). The availability of digital
transmission allows the possibility of teleradiology, which is rapidly becoming
commonplace as the costs of bandwidth and hardware drop.
What's New in Teleradiology
-- Editor's Note.
Teleradiology is by far the most common telemedicine
application. There are at least 10, and more likely 15 or more, diagnostic
teleradiology cases for each interactive video patient-clinician consultation.
Not only is there a lot of teleradiology activity, as shown in this
issues review of teleradiology service providers; there is also a fair
amount of money being spent on teleradiology equipment. A recent Frost &
Sullivan estimate placed the 1996 world sales of teleradiology products at
about $89 million. If PACS were considered in the equation, this figure would
obviously be much higher. |