Thursday, January 12, 2012

Teleradiology: Reading Services

Enhance Radiologists’ Clinical Effectiveness

Increasingly radiologist’s need to read and report on exams conducted and sent from multiple locations. The methods for doing this may also differ depending on the needs of the remote location. Often this scenario requires keeping multiple systems operating simultaneously. medQ has solved this with our Q/ris Reading Services Module (RSM) as featured in the May 2008 edition of Imaging Economics.


Q/ris 3000 RSM Key Benefits:

  • Combine data and images from multiple locations and sources, then integrate them into a seamless and unified work list; e.g., PACS, teleradiology applications, DICOM store and forward devices or direct from modalities
  • The RSM can be seamlessly integrated with existing HIS or RIS installations to receive patient information and orders as well as send back completed reports.
  • No limit to the number of locations or devices that can be added. We grow as your business does!
  • Capability to enter film orders as well as digital exams and integrate them into the unified work list.
  • Automatic Order Generation capability and dynamically creates an historical record of procedures, patient history, referring physicians with no pre-configuration required allowing a rapid deployment on site.
  • With our web-enabled architecture, order generation can be done automatically or set up to be a Quality Control Station either centrally, or at the sending location.
  • A virtually paperless operation eliminates the need for manual faxing or emailing of support documents. Data is captured once, at the source, and integrated into a complete reading package.
  • The Q/ris 3000™ Reading Services Module can be integrated with our Q/ris 3000™ Report module to provide onsite or remote report creation using either digital dictation or voice recognition.
For more information contact us at medq.info@medq.com, or call 1-800-597-6330 or visit our website www.medq.com 


Click here to read our pdf on the highlights of medQ's RSM

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