Title: INFORMATICS SOLUTIONS TO REAL-WORLD PROBLEMS IN EMERGENCY RADIOLOGY
1INFORMATICS SOLUTIONS TO REAL-WORLD PROBLEMS IN
EMERGENCY RADIOLOGY
- TIM OCONNELL, M.ENG, M.D.
2DISCLOSURES
- Speakers fees, Siemens Healthcare
- Training sponsorship, Toshiba Canada
- President, Resolve Radiologic Ltd
3GOALS FOR TODAYS TALK
- a. Learn about some of the safety issues around
the time-sensitive workflows in emergency
radiology - b. Understand how visual control systems can be
used to improve radiologist awareness of workflow
and safety issues in emergency radiology,
including inter physician communication - c. Learn how customized informatics solutions can
be deployed in the radiology department settings
to improve the quality and safety of care
4GOALS FOR TODAYS TALK
- Learn what is possible
- Im not saying this is what you should do
- Im saying some of this you can do
5DEFINITION VISUAL CONTROL
- Visual control is a business management technique
employed where information is communicated by
using visual signals - This entails making problems, abnormalities, or
deviations from standards visible to everyone
http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visual_control
6BACKGROUND VISUAL CONTROL
7BACKGROUND VISUAL CONTROL
8ER RADIOLOGY 3 BIG CHALLENGES
- Get the right imaging for the right patient
- Get the right results to the right person
- Do both of the above in the right timeframe
9SIMPLE?
10BUT IN ANY GIVEN CASE
11WHAT WE NEED VS WHAT WE HAVE
- Need
- Easy to use, reliable, safe tools for
communication of our complex workflow between the
people who need information - Have
- Pagers - 1950
- Fax machines - 1966
- Paper forms - 2nd century BC
12AND OUR PROCESSES ARE SIMPLE, RIGHT?
Ordering
Interpretation
Results
13NOT REALLY
Reiner, B. I. (2014). Hidden Costs of Poor Image
Quality A Radiologist's Perspective. Journal of
the American College of Radiology JACR, 11(10),
974978.
14COMPLEXITY RISK
- Taking too long to image a case
- Imaging a case incorrectly
- Taking too long before interpreting a case
- Communicating incorrect preliminary results
- Misunderstanding/miscommunication of results
- Distribution of results to wrong people
15NOT LIKE THE GM PLANT
- Traditional business analysis and solutions dont
apply - If a car assembly line gets backed up, the cars
dont spontaneously explode - But in ER radiology, delays to diagnosis or poor
communication can mean increased morbidity or
mortality
16PROBLEM LIST
- Order management
- Image study technique/monitoring
- Radiation Dose and Protocol Management
- Report management/workload
- Interpretation Quality and Efficiency
- Critical results communication
17ORDER MANAGEMENT
18ORDER MANAGEMENT
Reiner, B. I. (2014). Hidden Costs of Poor Image
Quality A Radiologist's Perspective. Journal of
the American College of Radiology JACR, 11(10),
974978.
19CURRENT STATE IN VGH ERORDER MANAGEMENT
- Requisition printer in the ER Reading Room
- All CT/US/MR studies require a telephone call
from the EP - After call, we get requisition, protocol it, and
get it to CT/MR tech or trainee to perform US
20CURRENT STATE BENEFITSORDER MANAGEMENT
- No auto-protocoling
- Ensures radiologist is essential part of imaging
- Ensures we get a chance to ask questions about
history - Helps to ensure exam appropriateness
- Manual protocoling good for trainee teaching
about complexities of protocoling
21PROBLEM LISTORDER MANAGEMENT
- EPs who forget to call us
- EPs who call us but forget to enter the order
- When we forget to protocol/deliver requisition
22SOLUTION SCHEDULED STUDIES DISPLAY
50 Monitor and mini PC - 1400 186 lines of code
- 600 (free!) Access to Modality Worklist Server
23SOLUTION ORDERED/SCHEDULED STUDIES DISPLAY
- Future state is to display both ordered and
scheduled studies - Pending access to RIS database
- Will avoid risk where EP forgets to call us
24STUDY TECHNIQUE /DOSE PROTOCOL QA
25STUDY TECHNIQUE/DOSE AND PROTOCOL QA
Reiner, B. I. (2014). Hidden Costs of Poor Image
Quality A Radiologist's Perspective. Journal of
the American College of Radiology JACR, 11(10),
974978.
26CURRENT STATE STUDY TECHNIQUE
- Real-time monitoring of ER CT and MR scan consoles
27BENEFITS REAL-TIME MONITORING
- Appendix checking with MRI tech for MR
Appendicitis - Position of ROI for CT Bolus Tracking, CT Scan
Range - Correct CT Protocol Selection
- Real-time Diagnoses we have seen
- Acute intracranial hemorrhage
- AAA Rupture
- Pneumothorax
- Aortic dissection
- Massive PE
28DOSE AND PROTOCOL QA
- Two tools
- Real-time CT Dose Database
- 70 display in reading room
- Offline CT Protocol Analyzer
- Interactive, web-based tool
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31- Difference in dose due to
- Longer (Z-axis) topogram
- Larger patient
32Identical protocols, with different names - time
to clean up the scanner!
33IT CANT HAPPEN HERE
L-Spine CT, Brigham Womens Hospital, 2013
Total dose 4683.6 mGy 70mSv
34BUT IT DOES
35REAL-TIME DOSE DISPLAY BENEFITS
- Immediate feedback on old/improper protocol use
- Education about scan protocols and dose metrics
for trainees - Information for clinicians - shows real-time
impacts of imaging
36OFFLINE PROTOCOL ANALYZER
- Interactive, web-based tool
- Allows user to upload CT protocol export from
scanner - User can then browse protocols
37OFFLINE PROTOCOL ANALYZER
Upload Screen
38OFFLINE PROTOCOL ANALYZER
List of uploaded protocols
39OFFLINE PROTOCOL ANALYZER
Scan Parameters
Reconstructions
40OFFLINE PROTOCOL ANALYZER BENEFITS
- Allows users to diagnose protocol issues without
interrupting scanner workflow - Educational tool for trainees
- For accreditation requirements for CT protocol
reviews
41INTERPRETATION QUALITY AND EFFICIENCY
42INTERPRETATION EFFICIENCY
Reiner, B. I. (2014). Hidden Costs of Poor Image
Quality A Radiologist's Perspective. Journal of
the American College of Radiology JACR, 11(10),
974978.
43INTERPRETATION CURRENT STATE
- Always a drive to improve interpretation
efficiency and quality in the ER setting - Efficiency problem
- Prior images often not available
- Radiology reports can be time consuming to read
- Quality problem
- No good method to follow up future studies
- Self QA, learning, teaching cases
44PRIOR REPORTS NLP
- NLP Natural Language Processing
- Computer-based interpretation and understanding
of text
NN NOUN, SINGULAR JJ ADJECTIVE IN PREPOSITION
NNS NOUN, PLURAL CC COORDINATING CONJUNCTION VBZ VERB, 3RD PERSON SINGULAR
VBP VERB, NON-3RD PERSON SINGULAR RB ADVERB VBN VERB, PAST PARTICIPLE
45Open Source NLP Toolkit
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48FUTURE REPORTS TRACKER
- In interesting or uncertain cases
- Need a way to flag the case as interesting and
automatically receive updates about the patient
if/when future imaging occurs - Benefits
- Education
- QA
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50- Future improvement
- Track by body part
- Track surgical/discharge diagnoses
51REPORTING MANAGEMENT/WORKLOAD
52REPORTING MANAGEMENT
Reiner, B. I. (2014). Hidden Costs of Poor Image
Quality A Radiologist's Perspective. Journal of
the American College of Radiology JACR, 11(10),
974978.
53REPORTING MANAGEMENT CURRENT STATE
- At our institution
- Clinicians use Philips iSite
- Radiologists use Agfa Impax
- Clinicians have no informaiton about status of
study interpretation or which radiologist is
reading - Problems with ER waiting on reports
- Problems with ER getting interpretations if
studies read by non-ER radiologists
54REPORTING MANAGEMENT SOLUTION
ER Workload Tracker - on a 70 display in ER
reading room and in ER Nursing Station
55ER WORKLOAD TRACKING BOARD
56ER WORKLIST TRACKING BOARD
57REPORTING MANAGEMENT BENEFITS
- At-a-glance views of
- Current workload status (all red get to work!)
- Who is reading studies - can redirect ER
physicians - New studies from other sites
58CRITICAL RESULTS COMMUNICATION
59REPORTING MANAGEMENT
Reiner, B. I. (2014). Hidden Costs of Poor Image
Quality A Radiologist's Perspective. Journal of
the American College of Radiology JACR, 11(10),
974978.
60CRITICAL RESULTS CURRENT STATE
- Verbal reports from ER Radiologist or trainee for
all CT/MRI/US studies - CRs - ERP can leave an impression in Impax, but
most use iSite and often do not leave anything
61CRITICAL RESULTS CURRENT STATE
- Problem 1
- Poor documentation by rads and trainees about
delivery of critical results - The responsible physician was informed at
approximately 300pm - No name
- No specific findings
- No method of communication documented
- Time may be incorrect, and may be important
62CRITICAL RESULTS CURRENT STATE
- Problem 2
- EPs claiming they werent told about incidental
findings - EPs who dont want to know about incidental
findings - Patients without primary care providers
63CAR STANDARD COMMUNICATION OF DIAGNOSTIC IMAGING
FINDINGS
- In some circumstances, such co-ordination may
require direct communication to the referring
physician in advance of the formal written
report. These include - The detection of conditions carrying the risk of
acute morbidity and/or mortality which may
require immediate case management decisions. - The detection of disease sufficiently serious
that it may require prompt notification of the
patient, clinical evaluation or initiation of
treatment.
64CRITICAL RESULTS CURRENT STATE
- Best effort at present, but getting contentious
with EPs - Need a way to reliably document
- What was communicated
- With whom
- When
- How
- In a way that always requires all of the above
and can be queried and audited (i.e. not the
radiology report)
65CRITICAL RESULTS INTERIM SOLUTION
One click from PACS Web-based Critical
Notification Record
66Similar to BWH ANCR
67CRITICAL RESULTS FUTURE STATE
Philips Intellispace Critical Findings Module
68SUMMARY
- Visual Control tools are effective for
communication of scan information, workload and
study status in emergency radiology environment,
and can improve quality and safety - Small, inexpensive informatics projects can work
- you dont need to wait for big projects! - Be wary of projects that boil the ocean
69SUMMARY
- Going forward still lots to do
- All of these projects require ongoing maintenance
- Biggest ongoing problem is the lack of hospital
IT support - Need
- Clinical decision support
- Electronic protocoling
- Electronic, secure result delivery
70THANK-YOU
- Dr. John Mayo, Department Head, Radiology,
VGH/UBC Site - Dr. Savvas Nicolaou, Section Head, Emergency
Radiology, VGH - Dr. Luck Louis, VGH ER Radiologist
- Dr. Patrick McLaughlin, VGH ER Radiologist
- Dr. Aaron Sodickson, BWH ER Radiologist
- Dr. Jeff Hu, PGY-1 Intern
- Cornell Ra, Jay Wong, and Roger MacDonald, VGH
PACS IT Support
71Thank you!