Pediatric Trauma Transfer Imaging Inefficiencies—Opportunities for Improvement with Cloud Technology

<strong>BACKGROUND</strong>: This study examines the inefficiencies of radiologic imaging transfers from one hospital to the other during pediatric trauma transfers in an era of cloud based information sharing. <strong>METHODS</strong>: Retrospective review of all patients tr...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Yana Puckett, Alvin To
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AIMS Press 2016-02-01
Series:AIMS Public Health
Online Access:http://www.aimspress.com/aimsph/article/651/fulltext.html
Description
Summary:<strong>BACKGROUND</strong>: This study examines the inefficiencies of radiologic imaging transfers from one hospital to the other during pediatric trauma transfers in an era of cloud based information sharing. <strong>METHODS</strong>: Retrospective review of all patients transferred to a pediatric trauma center from 2008–2014 was performed. Imaging was reviewed for whether imaging accompanied the patient, whether imaging was able to be uploaded onto computer for records, whether imaging had to be repeated, and whether imaging obtained at outside hospitals (OSH) was done per universal pediatric trauma guidelines. <strong>RESULTS: </strong>Of the 1761 patients retrospectively reviewed, 559 met our inclusion criteria. Imaging was sent with the patient 87.7% of the time. Imaging was unable to be uploaded 31.9% of the time. CT imaging had to be repeated 1.8% of the time. CT scan was not done per universal pediatric trauma guidelines 1.2% of the time. <strong>CONCLUSION: </strong>Our study demonstrated that current imaging transfer is inefficient, leads to excess ionizing radiation, and increased healthcare costs. Universal implementation of cloud based radiology has the potential to eliminate excess ionizing radiation to children, improve patient care, and save cost to healthcare system.
ISSN:2327-8994