Ocular Imaging Challenges, Current State, and a Path to Interoperability: A HIMSS-SIIM Enterprise Imaging Community Whitepaper

Office-based testing, enhanced by advances in imaging technology, is routinely used in eye care to non-invasively assess ocular structure and function. This type of imaging coupled with autonomous artificial intelligence holds immense opportunity to diagnose eye diseases quickly. Despite the wide av...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of imaging informatics in medicine 2024-10
Hauptverfasser: Goetz, Kerry E, Boland, Michael V, Chu, Zhongdi, Reed, Amberlynn A, Clark, Shawn D, Towbin, Alexander J, Purt, Boonkit, O'Donnell, Kevin, Bui, Marilyn M, Eid, Monief, Roth, Christopher J, Luviano, Damien M, Folio, Les R
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Office-based testing, enhanced by advances in imaging technology, is routinely used in eye care to non-invasively assess ocular structure and function. This type of imaging coupled with autonomous artificial intelligence holds immense opportunity to diagnose eye diseases quickly. Despite the wide availability and use of ocular imaging, there are several factors that hinder optimization of clinical practice and patient care. While some large institutions have developed end-to-end digital workflows that utilize electronic health records, enterprise imaging archives, and dedicated diagnostic viewers, this experience has not yet made its way to smaller and independent eye clinics. Fractured interoperability practices impact patient care in all healthcare domains, including eye care where there is a scarcity of care centers, making collaboration essential among providers, specialists, and primary care who might be treating systemic conditions with profound impact on vision. The purpose of this white paper is to describe the current state of ocular imaging by focusing on the challenges related to interoperability, reporting, and clinical workflow.
ISSN:2948-2933
2948-2933
DOI:10.1007/s10278-024-01261-0