Browsing by Author "Gaskin, Cree M."
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- Interactive Multimedia Reporting Technical Considerations: HIMSS-SIIM Collaborative White PaperBerkowitz, Seth J.; Kwan, David; Cornish, Toby C.; Silver, Elliot L.; Thullner, Karen S.; Aisen, Alex; Bui, Marilyn M.; Clark, Shawn D.; Clunie, David A.; Eid, Monief; Hartman, Douglas J.; Ho, Kinson; Leontiev, Andrei; Luviano, Damien M.; O’Toole, Peter E.; Parwani, Anil V.; Pereira, Nielsen S.; Rotemberg, Veronica; Vining, David J.; Gaskin, Cree M.; Roth, Christopher J.; Folio, Les R. (Springer, 2022-08)Despite technological advances in the analysis of digital images for medical consultations, many health information systems lack the ability to correlate textual descriptions of image findings linked to the actual images. Images and reports often reside in separate silos in the medical record throughout the process of image viewing, report authoring, and report consumption. Forward-thinking centers and early adopters have created interactive reports with multimedia elements and embedded hyperlinks in reports that connect the narrative text with the related source images and measurements. Most of these solutions rely on proprietary single-vendor systems for viewing and reporting in the absence of any encompassing industry standards to facilitate interoperability with the electronic health record (EHR) and other systems. International standards have enabled the digitization of image acquisition, storage, viewing, and structured reporting. These provide the foundation to discuss enhanced reporting. Lessons learned in the digital transformation of radiology and pathology can serve as a basis for interactive multimedia reporting (IMR) across image-centric medical specialties. This paper describes the standard-based infrastructure and communications to fulfill recently defined clinical requirements through a consensus from an international workgroup of multidisciplinary medical specialists, informaticists, and industry participants. These efforts have led toward the development of an Integrating the Healthcare Enterprise (IHE) profile that will serve as a foundation for interoperable interactive multimedia reporting.
- Multispecialty Enterprise Imaging Workgroup Consensus on Interactive Multimedia Reporting Current State and Road to the Future: HIMSS-SIIM Collaborative White PaperRoth, Christopher J.; Clunie, David A.; Vining, David J.; Berkowitz, Seth J.; Berlin, Alejandro; Bissonnette, Jean-Pierre; Clark, Shawn D.; Cornish, Toby C.; Eid, Monief; Gaskin, Cree M.; Goel, Alexander K.; Jacobs, Genevieve C.; Kwan, David; Luviano, Damien M.; McBee, Morgan P.; Miller, Kelly; Hafiz, Abdul Moiz; Obcemea, Ceferino; Parwani, Anil V.; Rotemberg, Veronica; Silver, Elliot L.; Storm, Erik S.; Tcheng, James E.; Thullner, Karen S.; Folio, Les R. (Journal of Digital Imaging, 2021-06-15)Diagnostic and evidential static image, video clip, and sound multimedia are captured during routine clinical care in cardiology, dermatology, ophthalmology, pathology, physiatry, radiation oncology, radiology, endoscopic procedural specialties, and other medical disciplines. Providers typically describe the multimedia findings in contemporaneous electronic health record clinical notes or associate a textual interpretative report. Visual communication aids commonly used to connect, synthesize, and supplement multimedia and descriptive text outside medicine remain technically challenging to integrate into patient care. Such beneficial interactive elements may include hyperlinks between text, multimedia elements, alphanumeric and geometric annotations, tables, graphs, timelines, diagrams, anatomic maps, and hyperlinks to external educational references that patients or provider consumers may find valuable. This HIMSS-SIIM Enterprise Imaging Community workgroup white paper outlines the current and desired clinical future state of interactive multimedia reporting (IMR). The workgroup adopted a consensus definition of IMR as “interactive medical documentation that combines clinical images, videos, sound, imaging metadata, and/or image annotations with text, typographic emphases, tables, graphs, event timelines, anatomic maps, hyperlinks, and/or educational resources to optimize communication between medical professionals, and between medical professionals and their patients.” This white paper also serves as a precursor for future efforts toward solving technical issues impeding routine interactive multimedia report creation and ingestion into electronic health records.