Development and Implementation of an Ambulatory Orders-Based Ophthalmology Imaging Workflow.

Michael K Oswald, Cieara Presley, Laurie A Perry, JaTawna Bush, Bessie Ganim, David Hulefeld, Jay Patel, Melissa Scott, Veeral S Shah, Evan Slavik, Sarah Smith, Kelli Vieson, Fred Walker, Alexander J Towbin
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Abstract

Background: Ocular imaging is essential to the diagnosis and management of eye disease, yet standardized imaging workflows remain underdeveloped in the eye care setting. This manuscript describes the design and implementation of an orders-based imaging workflow for ambulatory ophthalmology integrated with the electronic health record and enterprise imaging systems.

Methods: We developed a DICOM-compliant workflow for pediatric ophthalmology imaging that supports HL7 integration, DICOM modality worklists, and enterprise archive storage. Workflow steps were automated where possible, including imaging order placement, metadata application, and documentation. Pre- and post-implementation workflows were evaluated for efficiency, measuring mouse clicks, keystrokes, and time to completion. Imaging study volumes and billing data were collected following implementation.

Results: Thirteen imaging devices across six modalities and five locations were integrated. The new workflow reduced manual data entry and enabled structured documentation. Post-implementation, 16,267 imaging studies were completed, generating $11.4 million in billed charges. Workflow efficiency improved, with keystrokes and mouse clicks reduced by 40-86% depending on modality. Time savings were observed in most modalities, although optical coherence tomography and B-scan ultrasound required more time due to order-specific imaging steps.

Conclusion: An orders-based imaging workflow for ophthalmology can improve efficiency, standardization, and interoperability while enabling proper image archiving and billing. Challenges remain with vendor variability in DICOM support and image output formats. These findings support broader adoption of standardized imaging practices in ophthalmology.

基于门诊医嘱的眼科成像工作流程的开发与实现。
背景:眼成像对眼病的诊断和治疗至关重要,但标准化的成像工作流程在眼保健环境中仍然不发达。这篇手稿描述了基于订单的门诊眼科成像工作流程的设计和实现,集成了电子健康记录和企业成像系统。方法:我们开发了一个符合DICOM标准的儿童眼科成像工作流程,支持HL7集成、DICOM模式工作列表和企业存档存储。工作流步骤在可能的情况下是自动化的,包括成像订单放置、元数据应用程序和文档。通过测量鼠标点击、击键和完成时间,评估了执行前和执行后的工作流程的效率。在实施后收集了成像研究量和账单数据。结果:集成了6种模式和5个位置的13个成像设备。新的工作流减少了手工数据输入,并启用了结构化文档。实施后,完成了16,267项成像研究,产生了1,140万美元的帐单费用。工作流效率提高,按键和鼠标点击减少了40-86%,具体取决于模式。虽然光学相干断层扫描和b超扫描由于顺序特定的成像步骤需要更多的时间,但大多数模式都节省了时间。结论:基于订单的眼科成像工作流程可以提高效率、标准化和互操作性,同时实现适当的图像存档和计费。供应商在DICOM支持和图像输出格式方面的变化仍然存在挑战。这些发现支持在眼科中更广泛地采用标准化成像实践。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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