NEW YORK, Jan. 10, 2017 /PRNewswire/ -- One of the most important discussions in healthcare today centers around the shift from fee-for-service care to value-based care, a directive that in large part will be determined by healthcare providers' ability to marry important patient images, documents and other clinical multimedia files to the patient's electronic health record (EHR). Too often today, EHRs don't present the whole patient story. This means physicians must re-order tests unnecessarily or make care decisions without a comprehensive patient record to contribute to their decision-making accuracy. According to Logicalis Healthcare Solutions, the healthcare-focused arm of Logicalis US, an international IT solutions and managed services provider (www.us.logicalis.com), this is a problem enterprise imaging was designed to resolve. To help healthcare CIOs examine the important role enterprise imaging plays in value-based care, Logicalis is offering a new, downloadable white paper, "Accessible Images, Stronger Outcomes" as well as seven tips for selecting the right enterprise imaging platform.

"From advanced visualization tools and measurements to 'medical selfies,' healthcare organizations must examine a comprehensive enterprise imaging platform to meet the sophisticated collaborative needs of the entire care team as well as engaged patients in today's value-based care environment," says Kim Garriott, Principal Consultant, Healthcare Strategies, Logicalis Healthcare Solutions. "Enterprise imaging provides the answer."

Enterprise imaging solutions are purpose-built imaging engines that give healthcare systems a modular, phased approach to managing images as well as the ability to deliver real-time collaboration among caregivers all on a single platform. And, because enterprise imaging is a pervasive solution, it offers healthcare providers a clear and cost-effective detour around the roadblocks currently standing in the way of true value-based, patient-centric care and the financial rewards associated with delivering it.

Top Tips: What to Look for in an Enterprise Imaging Strategy
When exploring options for an enterprise imaging platform, what are some of the top things to look for? The following checklist offers seven solid suggestions.


    1. Component Interoperability: While many solutions have been pieced
       together with components that were not initially designed for
       interoperability, the various components of a solid enterprise imaging
       platform must work together harmoniously. Buying a platform that was
       designed from inception to work as one system will simultaneously ensure
       the highest level of interoperability and the lowest maintenance
       overhead.
    2. Multiple Viewer Options: Selecting a solution with multiple viewer
       options built into the platform allows clinicians to easily choose
       between "reference-quality" image viewing and full-fidelity
       "diagnostic-quality" image viewing with the click of a mouse. This kind
       of choice broadens the available data for real-time decision making at
       the point of care.
    3. Federated Image Viewing: If your organization is growing through
       acquisitions or has affiliate partners, look for a platform that supports
       federated image viewing. This means, with a few simple permissions,
       caregivers at disparate organizations can view images within the other
       organizations' Picture Archive and Communication System (PACS) or
       vendor-neutral archives (VNAs) without the need to move the images.
    4. Mobile Image Acquisition: The ability to securely acquire digital photos
       on a mobile device is a must. The application, however, must not only be
       secure but also provide real-time patient worklists and the ability to
       assign required patient demographic and other image-related metadata in a
       standardized fashion. While the most popular EHRs provide mobile
       applications to acquire images, these applications do not yet support the
       assignment of fixed, standardized data elements which is a critical step
       in ensuring data integrity and relevant presentation within the EHR.
    5. Image Exchange and Sharing: The ability to easily exchange and share
       images with patients and outside providers without the use of CDs is
       critical. The platform should image-enable existing patient portals or
       provide a free-standing, secure portal that supports the ability to
       quickly exchange and share images with outside providers. This capability
       is virtually guaranteed to provide increased patient and physician
       satisfaction and a reduction in operational expense.
    6. Longitudinal Patient History: The platform should be able to present a
       patient's complete longitudinal imaging history regardless of image type.
       Digital photos, traditional radiology and cardiology images along with
       others such as ophthalmology, maternal fetal medicine and
       surgical/medical scope images should be displayed in an intuitive patient
       worklist. This allows the caregiver to pick and choose the images that
       they would like to view and compare in a side-by-side fashion.
    7. Data Integrity: The platform must enable a high level of data integrity,
       thereby enhancing population health datasets and data presentation
       relevance by providing the ability to employ role-appropriate,
       standardized acquisition workflows and assign uniform discrete data
       elements at the point of acquisition.

Want to Learn More?


    --  If an enterprise imaging strategy isn't part of your EHR optimization
        plans today, where will you be in five years? Learn what the right
        enterprise imaging strategy can mean to your patients' clinical outcomes
        and your organization's bottom line, then see how Logicalis can help:
        http://ow.ly/ra0H306Sh38.
    --  Download Logicalis' enterprise imaging white paper, "Accessible Images,
        Stronger Outcomes: How Enterprise Imaging Aligns with Value-Based Care."
    --  Explore Logicalis' recent healthcare-related news as well as its
        healthcare website: http://ow.ly/jEd2306Sha0.

About Logicalis
Logicalis is an international multi-skilled solution provider providing digital enablement services to help customers harness digital technology and innovative services to deliver powerful business outcomes.

Our customers cross industries and geographical regions; our focus is to engage in the dynamics of our customers' vertical markets including financial services, TMT (telecommunications, media and technology), education, healthcare, retail, government, manufacturing and professional services, and to apply the skills of our 4,000 employees in modernizing key digital pillars, data center and cloud services, security and network infrastructure, workspace communications and collaboration, data and information strategies, and IT operation modernization.

We are the advocates for our customers for some of the world's leading technology companies including Cisco, HPE, IBM, NetApp, Microsoft, VMware and ServiceNow.

The Logicalis Group has annualized revenues of over $1.5 billion from operations in Europe, North America, Latin America and Asia Pacific. It is a division of Datatec Limited, listed on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange and the AIM market of the LSE, with revenues of over $6.5 billion.

For more information, visit www.us.logicalis.com.

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Media contacts:
Karen Franse, Communication Strategy Group for Logicalis US
kfranse@gocsg.com
866-997-2424 x222
www.gocsg.com

Arthur Germain, Communication Strategy Group for Logicalis US
agermain@gocsg.com
866-997-2424 x101
www.gocsg.com

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SOURCE Logicalis US