We use cookies to understand how you use our site and to improve your experience. This includes personalizing content and advertising. To learn more, click here. By continuing to use our site, you accept our use of cookies. Cookie Policy.

Features Partner Sites Information LinkXpress hp
Sign In
Advertise with Us
GLOBETECH PUBLISHING LLC

Download Mobile App




Belgian Hospital System Utilizing Hospital-Wide PACS Technology

By MedImaging International staff writers
Posted on 05 Aug 2010
Belgium's largest single campus hospital is installing the first example of a hospital-wide picture archiving and communications system (PACS). The technology will make it the first Belgian hospital to engage all departments in one central image-enabled archive system.

Prof. Bart Sijnave, chief information officer at UZ Gent Hospital explained, "Like many global healthcare providers, the push is to reduce the duration of stays, increasing the focus on the chain of information and ensuring that patient care is enhanced through good communication and the appropriate level of care provided by the right professional. We've worked with PACS in radiology for the last five years, and now there is no film used anywhere in the hospital- even surgery is completed using digital imaging. We decided we needed a central storage system, one where all multimedia could be deposited, easily accessed, and shared, regardless of the department from which it originated.”

As the largest single campus university hospital in Belgium, UZ Gent employs 6,000 people, housing 1,062 patient beds. The hospital focuses on the number of patients cared for and the throughput of day patients--in 2008, the hospital completed more than 101,000 procedures. The continuation of this upward trend will rely on optimized care being provided at every stage of patient recovery.

UZ Gent needed the ability to store multimedia and emerging imaging technology. Prof. Sijnave searched for a hospital-wide system that was more than just a bolted together bunch of software; it needed to be able to communicate with every caregiver, to be able to share idata using a vendor-independent platform, and the system it chose had to support that efficiently, molding itself to the working practices at UZ Gent.

Carestream Health, Inc. (Rochester, NY, USA) has designed a data workflow engine that is now at work in some of the biggest health maintenance organizations and hospitals worldwide. This made it the obvious choice for Prof. Sijnave. At UZ Gent the PACS will hook up over 40 different departments to one clinical archive. The enterprise-wide system will simplify IT administrative functions and reduce cost, delivering a multitier repository for industry-standard data such as XDS (Extended Data Services), XDS-I, Digital Imaging and Communications in Medicine (DICOM), HL [Health Level] 7, as well as other non-DICOM objects.

Carestream started the project by setting up five pilot departments and built from that to enable all 40 departments' access to the Clinical Data Archive (CDA). The archive will provide one access point to clinical images and other stored clinical information including images, video clips, laboratory results, and biopsy results.

UZ Gent is building a truly unique care model. Networked to 12 other hospitals, all able to access the technology platform, it has created a secure information and image exchange that has no reliance on geographic location. This efficient system is open and yet very secure, supporting the best methods of patient care.

Prof. Sijnave, described his vision, "Patient care will increasingly involve a multidiscipline approach, with teams working together to provide the most comprehensive care package possible. The theory sounds easy but in practice has traditionally broken down due to poor information exchange, particularly with the sharing of patient records.”

Having worked through the various issues associated with sharing information, UZ Gent is well situated to begin the move to a national and international platform where patient care can be completely transformed through the use of fast and efficient data sharing.

Related Links:

UZ Gent Hospital
Carestream Health


Half Apron
Demi
Portable X-ray Unit
AJEX140H
New
Floor‑Mounted Digital X‑Ray System
MasteRad MX30+
Digital Radiographic System
OMNERA 300M

Channels

Nuclear Medicine

view channel
Image: Perovskite crystal boules are grown in carefully controlled conditions from the melt (Photo courtesy of Mercouri Kanatzidis/Northwestern University)

New Camera Sees Inside Human Body for Enhanced Scanning and Diagnosis

Nuclear medicine scans like single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) allow doctors to observe heart function, track blood flow, and detect hidden diseases. However, current detectors are either... Read more

General/Advanced Imaging

view channel
Image: The Angio-CT solution integrates the latest advances in interventional imaging (Photo courtesy of Canon Medical)

Cutting-Edge Angio-CT Solution Offers New Therapeutic Possibilities

Maintaining accuracy and safety in interventional radiology is a constant challenge, especially as complex procedures require both high precision and efficiency. Traditional setups often involve multiple... Read more
Copyright © 2000-2025 Globetech Media. All rights reserved.