on April 23, 2013 |
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Topics: Health Systems, Strategy, Planning, Imaging, Service Lines, Continuum Integration, Methodologies, Performance Improvement, Appropriateness, Quality, IT Infrastructure, Information Technology, Clinical Decision Support, Electronic Medical Records Strategy
Natalie McGarry, Imaging Performance Partnership
How can radiology programs contribute to their organizations under reform? One health system CEO claims imaging is well positioned to provide leadership because of the specialty’s experience with data and the number of patients imaging touches.
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A hospital CEO weighs in: Radiology should lead reform
on October 24, 2012 |
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Topics: Clinical Decision Support, Electronic Medical Records Strategy, Information Technology, CPOE, Appropriateness, Quality, Performance Improvement, Imaging, Service Lines, Safety
Stephanie Krent, Imaging Performance Partnership
Earlier this month, we attended the ACR’s two-day summit on Imaging Informatics and the National Radiology Data Registries. Both days featured lively discussion on the need to define, track, and progress radiology quality.
We’ve distilled three main takeaways from the meeting for imaging leaders.
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Performance benchmarking: Three lessons from the ACR Imaging Informatics Summit
on July 23, 2012 |
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Topics: Imaging, Service Lines, CPOE, Information Technology, Clinical Decision Support, Electronic Medical Records Strategy, Meaningful Use
Shaun Lillard, Imaging Performance Partnership
As imaging news site AuntMinnie.com reports in a recent article, the American College of Radiology (ACR) has decided to commercialize the evidence-based appropriateness guidelines it began publishing almost two decades ago. The organization is aiming to make its ACR Appropriateness Criteria into a national standard for ordering physicians.
It recently entered into an exclusive agency agreement with the National Decision Support Company (NDSC), and will name the product "ACR Select." The NDSC has agreed to provide HER vendors with the technical platform, support, and licensing of the product so it can be incorporated into computerized physician order-entry systems (CPOE).
The ACR Appropriateness Criteria encompasses over 1,380 topics and 614 variant conditions to help physicians understand which imaging procedures to order and when they are necessary. The database of guidelines is constantly updated by a panel of around 300 volunteer physicians, divided into 20 specialty panels, embodying over 20 organizations.
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Commercializing national standards: The details behind the decision