| Literature DB >> 27429270 |
Tim B Hunter1, Elizabeth A Krupinski2,3.
Abstract
This article reviews the University of Arizona's more than 15 years of experience with teleradiology and provides an overview of university-based teleradiology practice in the United States (U.S.). In the U.S., teleradiology is a major economic enterprise with many private for-profit companies offering national teleradiology services (i.e., professional interpretation of radiologic studies of all types by American Board of Radiology certified radiologists). The initial thrust for teleradiology was for after-hours coverage of radiologic studies, but teleradiology has expanded its venue to include routine full-time or partial coverage for small hospitals, clinics, specialty medical practices, and urgent care centers. It also provides subspecialty radiologic coverage not available at smaller medical centers and clinics. Many U.S. university-based academic departments of radiology provide teleradiology services usually as an additional for-profit business to supplement departmental income. Since academic-based teleradiology providers have to compete in a very demanding marketplace, their success is not guaranteed. They must provide timely, high-quality professional services for a competitive price. Academic practices have the advantage of house officers and fellows who can help with the coverage, and they have excellent subspecialty expertise. The marketplace is constantly shifting, and university-based teleradiology practices have to be nimble and adjust to ever-changing situations.Entities:
Keywords: academic medicine; telemedicine; teleradiology; university-based radiology
Year: 2014 PMID: 27429270 PMCID: PMC4934466 DOI: 10.3390/healthcare2020192
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Healthcare (Basel) ISSN: 2227-9032
Selected United States teleradiology vendors.
| Cleveland Clinic eRadiology |
| Direct Radiology |
| Rays |
| StatRad |
| 24/7 Radiology |
| Pediatric Radiology of America |
| NEXXRAD |
| VRad Alliance |
Selected University Based Teleradiology Practices.
| Academic Institution | Reference |
|---|---|
| Cleveland Clinic | [ |
| Emory University | [ |
| Massachusetts General Hospital | [ |
| UC Davis Health System | [ |
| University of Arizona | [ |
| University of Pittsburgh | [ |
| University Radiology Subspecialty Imaging in New Jersey | [ |
| UC San Diego | [ |
| University of South Alabama College of Medicine | [ |
| University of Virginia School of Medicine | [ |
| Veterans Administration Palo Alto Healthcare System | [ |
Critical Radiologic Findings ([28]).
| 1. Large pneumothorax; tension pneumothorax |
| 2. Unexpected or very large pulmonary embolus |
| 3. Large or unexpected intracranial hemorrhage |
| 4. Large pericardial effusion |
| 5. Dissection of the aorta |
| 6. Unstable spine fracture |
| 7. Free intra-abdominal gas |
| 8. Unexpected fetal anomaly |
| 9. Unexpected lung mass |
Recommendations for a Successful University-Based Teleradiology Practice.
| Subspecialty based practice with consistent faculty and resident participation on a daily basis |
| Concise, well written reports with definitive conclusions and recommendations where appropriate |
| Round the clock support services-teleradiology technical help line; physician’s teleradiology resource line |
| Consistent delivery of patient reports to the originating site with formal process for the prompt communication of critical findings |
| Proper faculty licensing, credentialing, and peer review |
| Peer review results available to contracting sites obeying confidentiality and peer review protection |
| Easy, formal process for resolving complaints concerning erroneous reports or other problems |
| Competitive pricing |
| Regular communication and periodic on-site visits |