Fachbuch, 2013
194 Seiten
1 INTRODUCTION
1.1 STATEMENT OF THE PROBLEM AND MOTIVATION
1.2 Aims and Objectives
1.3 Work Procedure
2 STATE OF THE ART
2.1 Medical Documentation and Classification
2.2 Communications standards in Radiology
2.3 Medical Imaging
2.4 Image Compression
2.5 Picture Archiving and Communication System (PACS)
2.6 Hospital Information system (HIS)
2.7 Electronic Patient Files
2.8 Radiology information systems (RIS)
2.9 Technical Network Basis
2.10 Teleradiology
2.11 System integration architectures and models
2.12 Security and Data Protection Aspects
3 MATERIALS AND METHODS
3.1 Literature Research
3.2 Genericness
3.3 Holisticity
3.4 Managing Complexity
3.5 Patient Orientation
3.6 Theoretical Modeling
4 THEORETICAL ANALYSIS
4.1 The Effect of Digitization on the Patient
4.2 Effect of Digitization on Processes
4.3 The Effects of Digitalization on the Economy
5 MODELING THE IMPLEMENTATION METHOD
5.1 Differentiation between Development, Implementation, Operation and Integration of Information Systems
5.2 Description of the Implementation Method
5.3 Procedure Model of the Implementation Method
5.4 Information Container as the Core of the Implementation Method
5.5 Project generation
5.6 Process Team and Project Team
6 DISCUSSION
6.1 Meeting Objectives
6.2 Methodology
6.3 The Limits of the Concept
6.4 Comparison with other Concepts
6.5 Usability of the Concept for Adjacent Areas
6.6 Final Conclusions
6.7 Outlook
7 SUMMARY
This thesis aims to explore the multifaceted impact of the digitization of radiology on healthcare, specifically analyzing its influence on patients, clinical processes, and economic structures. The primary research objective is to develop a holistic, patient-oriented implementation method for information systems within teleradiology networks, addressing the complexities inherent in modern healthcare integration.
2.4 IMAGE COMPRESSION
The storage and distribution of images is a central task of PACS systems. Depending on the investigations and recording type the quality requirements vary with the images produced. For example, in ultrasound images of a resolution of 320 x 240 or 640 x 480 pixels at a gray value resolution of 8 bits per pixel are sufficient. Other the hand, in digital X-ray images a resolution of 2048 x 2048 pixels are required and a gray value resolution of 10 bits per pixel. The size of medical images grows progressively with increasing image and gray value resolution of imaging devices. The total data volume of radiology in the average hospital is therefore very large and makes heavy demands on storage capacity, performance and data transfer. The effective storage and fast transmission of medical images between the transmitter and receiver with direct phone lines, local or global networks like the Internet are important strategic issues of digital radiology.
High data rates are usually only available in local area networks (LAN - Local Area Network), whereas the communication outside the immediate proximity is only possible through networks with limited capacity such as ISDN, GSM or the Internet. To meet these demands, the picture data must be compressed.
1 INTRODUCTION: Outlines the statement of the problem, motivation, objectives, and work procedure regarding the digitization of radiology.
2 STATE OF THE ART: Provides a comprehensive overview of existing medical documentation, communication standards, medical imaging, PACS, RIS, and integration architectures.
3 MATERIALS AND METHODS: Discusses the research methodology, emphasizing literature research, genericness, holisticity, complexity management, patient orientation, and theoretical modeling.
4 THEORETICAL ANALYSIS: Analyzes the effects of digitization on the patient, organizational processes, and the economy, including the G-DRG system.
5 MODELING THE IMPLEMENTATION METHOD: Introduces the core implementation method, detailing information containers, procedure models, and project generation types.
6 DISCUSSION: Evaluates the achievement of objectives, the methodology used, conceptual limits, and compares the approach to existing models, including an outlook for future developments.
7 SUMMARY: Summarizes the main findings and the developed implementation method.
Teleradiology, Digitization, PACS, RIS, HIS, Information Management, Healthcare IT, Process Optimization, Patient Orientation, DRG, Information Container, Implementation Method, Middleware, DICOM, HL7
The work focuses on the digitization of radiology and its impact on healthcare, proposing a holistic method to implement information systems in teleradiology networks.
The main themes include patient care, process management, economic efficiency, healthcare IT architecture, and strategic management.
The goal is to develop a modular, patient-oriented implementation method that integrates technological requirements with business and clinical processes.
The work utilizes a theoretical, literature-based research approach, employing systems theory, process modeling, and architectural framework analysis.
The main body covers the current state of technology, theoretical analysis of digitization effects, and the detailed modeling of the proposed implementation methodology.
Key terms include Teleradiology, PACS, Information Containers, Process Optimization, and Healthcare IT Integration.
Information containers are the core of the implementation method, acting as central storage units for all relevant data, linking modules, content levels, and processes in a multi-dimensional matrix.
The method manages complexity by breaking down systems into interconnected modules within information containers, ensuring a holistic view that prevents over-simplification.
Patient orientation is treated as a methodological component to ensure that IT systems are not merely technical tools but strategic platforms supporting recovery and quality of care.
The G-DRG system serves as an economic context, highlighting the need for efficient IT-based process management and precise cost documentation in hospitals.
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