Sunday, June 24, 2012

Radiography: New Certegra workstation opportunity Dose Management Systems

A new workstation is an informatics-driven touch-screen hub that enables timesavings and improved patient care through a powerful range of computed tomography (CT) contrast dose-management applications and a new P3T 2.0 operating environment.
 The new Certegra workstation, developed by Bayer Radiology & Interventional (Tarrytown, NY, USA), was presented at the annual meeting of the Society for Imaging Informatics in Medicine (SIIM) 2012 June 7-12, 2012, in Orlando (FL, USA). Following the initial launch in the United States and Canada, the workstation will be rolled out in phases in markets worldwide.

 The Workstation serves as a single interface for radiology technologists, enabling them to provide improved patient care from study set-up and preparation to administration of the patient's study. It will be the cornerstone of Bayer's industry-first contrast dose management solution and informatics platform. In establishing and uploading the patient’s contrast-injection record, the workstation imports patient data directly from the Modality Work List--reducing manual entry errors to the patient record.

 “Today’s technology-driven CT suite demands timely access to reliable contrast-dose records throughout the chain of care,” said Anthony Cinalli, vice president of the informatics business at Bayer Radiology & Interventional. “Enabling a single workflow-centralized interface, the workstation allows for fewer clicks, less manual entry, and greater control over the quality and consistency of patient care.”

 Interfacing with Medrad Stellant CT injection systems, the Workstation's comprehensive suite of software options provides physicians and healthcare professionals instant access to real-time actionable CT contrast data captured at the point of care--enabling benefits including (1) reducing subdiagnostic studies, unnecessary rescans and associated radiation exposure (P3T 2.0 for personalized CT abdominal, cardiac and pulmonary angiography studies); (2) enabling more complete diagnostic decisions (picture archiving and communication system [PACS] outbound interface); (3) Speeding-up radiology report turnaround time and create greater study-volume bandwidth (radiology information system [RIS] and SR outbound interfaces); and (4) improving department performance by trending, reporting and analyzing actionable data with pinpoint accuracy (Informatics Starter Package, and the data analysis and reporting tool).

Source:
medimaging.net