Technology stalks healthcare. As hospitals increasingly seek ways to cut costs in the
face of escalating technology purchases, a trend is emerging thats as surprising as
it is effective: the repurposing of biomeds and clinical engineers as PACS
(picture archiving and communications system) support personnel. Transitioning to PACS
support also can provide a stalled career the boost it needs. Will you be ready to answer
the door when PACS opportunities come knocking?
Technology stalks healthcare. As hospitals increasingly seek ways
to cut costs in the face of escalating technology purchases, a trend is emerging
thats as surprising as it is effective: the repurposing, or conversion,
of biomeds and clinical engineers as PACS (picture archiving and communications system)
support personnel.
There are many sensible reasons to include them in the PACS scenario. One is economics.
Larry Cornell, managing director of MTS-Delft, a systems consulting service in Aurora,
Ohio, says, The cost of PACS maintenance is between 15 and 20 percent of the
purchase price. In-house biomedical service of PAC systems can reduce the cost of
maintenance the same way it reduces the cost of imaging maintenance and biomedical
maintenance. In the 80s, when biomeds moved into the imaging modality side, the
maintenance cost was reduced by an average of 15 percent.
Another reason is that biomeds and clinical engineers can close critical gaps in the
loop formed by radiologists and information technology departments. They have the
base knowledge of how medicine works, how a medical business works, whereas the IT people
generally do not, and thats what the hospitals looking for, says John
Engel, senior systems training specialist at DITEC, Inc. (Solon, Ohio). He teaches a
course there called Networks, DICOM and PACS for Service Managers and
Administrators.
Its very important that a PACS solution in a hospital include
radiology/cardiology, IT and biomedical engineering, agrees Cornell. There
havent been good results by IT and radiology alone; IT doesnt have all the
answers in terms of imaging modalities. Ultimately, the clinical engineering or biomed
group being a part of that triad is an excellent solution.
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