The Deficit Reduction Act (DRA),
competition and continuing focus on high
quality patient care are all driving imaging
departments and facilities to focus on pushing
their productivity. From radiologists,
technologists and other staff to equipment and
scheduling, facilities are finding the best
ways to get the most out of their valuable
resources.
The Deficit Reduction Act has taken its toll
and “we have reasons to believe that there
will be further cuts,” says Kirk Lawson,
administrator of the New York University
radiology department. “Radiology is going to
remain a potential target down the road in the
next few years for further cuts.” As a large
enterprise, NYU is surviving in spite of cuts.
Also, as an independent, private center, “our
volume, size and ability to be flexible lets
us respond more easily.”
Nationally, hospitals are challenged to do
more with less, he says. “I know that if I
want additional staff, I have to know that I’m
being highly productive and can justify new
staff.”
Complicated workflow

NYU’s radiology department provides
services for three hospitals in eight
locations, and performs just over 300,000
studies a year. “As we get larger and have
more locations, workflow gets more
complicated.” The team offers the full gamut
of interventional and diagnostic imaging
studies and is highly subspecialized in MR,
CT, cardiac CT, nuclear medicine and
ultrasound.
The facility switched to the Workflow RIS from
Siemens Medical Solutions last fall. After
using their previous RIS for 11 years, the
facility underwent a massive conversion, says
Lawson, migrating forward 3.5 million studies.
“We decided to convert data rather than start
with a clean slate. That made the project more
challenging.”
NYU also has a home-grown, internal department
software called RadClinInfo—a web-based site
begun in early 2000 that hosts a “cavalcade of
important data for performance measurement,”
Lawson says. Within the facility’s financial
department is decision-support services that
has its own staff. The group helps the
institution look at both staff and supply
productivity, Lawson says. “It’s an extremely
important tool because it allows us to, by
payroll, have graphic presentation of how
staffing looks compared to volume.” Based on
the payroll schedule, it’s updated every two
weeks.
Getting granular

“We can get very granular in detail. If we
don’t appear particularly productive in a
payroll period, we can see what’s going on,
such as whether it’s due to holidays or people
covering overtime.” The same applies to
procedure volumes—if they’ve dropped, Lawson
can see if it correlates to a drop in hospital
census. Administrators can respond on a
continuous basis.
All of these tools play to the
administration’s focus on “transforming us
into a world-class care institution,” he says.
“Embedded in that is productivity.” Hospital
administration expects department leaders to
utilize productivity tools and respond. Since
expensive equipment is involved in radiology,
any savings and making the maximum use of
resources, including space, staff and
equipment, are important.
Another vital element of productivity is phone
reporting capabilities. NYU has a scheduling
department within radiology that uses software
to track the average abandoned call rate. “If
it’s taking five minutes to get through
scheduling, we’ll have a higher abandoned call
rate,” Lawson says. The RIS conversion forced
the facility to look at all processes to
customize the system. That can cause setbacks
in high transaction areas like scheduling. “We
consistently have a high volume of encounters.
Adding 30 seconds to each call has an
immediate impact.”
The calls impact how effectively the scanner
is utilized. Although there isn’t much empty
scanner time, Lawson says the team recently
whittled a five-day backlog down to four days.
That reduction favorably impacts referring
physician satisfaction, patient satisfaction
and profitability.
On the hospital side, NYU works with the
facility HIS and CPOE system. “We work with
escort and expedite orders as efficiently as
possible.” Escort services uses tracking
software to triage and parse out the workflow,
which serves as another metric. “For
inpatients, productivity hinges on
collaboration with escort. Discrepancies can
result in empty scanner time.”
Staff and equipment metrics

Integration between the RIS and imaging
systems also helps track productivity.
“Information from the scanner populates our
RIS,” says Lawson. The data include when a
procedure began and ended, when the patient
left the department, time stamp when a
physician orders an x-ray on an ED patient and
more. That also interfaces with the facility’s
dictation system, which sends information on
when radiologists finish preliminary and final
reports.
“It’s very precise and very powerful,” he
says. Reducing ED turn-around time and length
of stay are department goals, as is setting up
same-day service for MRI, and Lawson expects
these reports to help reach those
achievements. Plus, “The Joint Commission is
very keen on understanding that we’re always
working to improve turn-around times.”
Another way facilities can maintain or improve
productivity is by more evenly distributing
the workload among staff and locations.
Medical Center Hospital in Odessa, Texas, has
been using Enterprise Medical Image Management
from ScImage since last fall to distribute
cardiology and radiology images. “Our goal was
web distribution and having one spot that the
radiologist or cardiologist could go to to
view images,” says Medical Imaging Manager
Brad Shook. The system queries and pulls
images from the existing PACS and cardiology
system to display images for doctors. “We’re
able to continue using our current
infrastructure and put this product on top to
get images out to the web.”
As a rural facility, Medical Center Hospital
has a cardiologist in a remote town who reads
pediatric echocardiograms. “We had never been
able to get a solution that worked, other than
mailing a videotape.” Eventually, Shook
learned about the ScImage offering. “It worked
so well for the cardiologists that we saw the
potential for it working for all images, not
just one discipline.”
Aside from web distribution, the facility
recently replaced its PACS, RIS and voice
recognition from three different vendors with
a single-vendor solution from DR Systems.
Shook anticipates a 20 percent increase in
radiologist productivity as a result of the
switch. The doctors have been using voice
recognition for five years already so he
doesn’t expect a big learning curve. “That
being said, we’re still expecting to increase
productivity because it is one vendor. We
don’t have integrations between different
vendors.”
Pinpointing productivity

Alegent Health, a health system based in
Omaha, Neb., with five metropolitan hospitals
and two rural hospitals, implemented Workflow
RIS, Sienet Magic, syngo Dynmics, Soarian
Clinical Access from Siemens Medical Solutions
specifically to maintain its high level of
productivity. The software replaced a manual
system that was “cumbersome and
time-consuming,” says RIS Administrator Craig
Luedtke.
The software’s RIS application lets Luedtke
tie relative value units (RVUs), as designated
by the American College of Radiology, to
specific procedures for a breakdown by
department. Users can manipulate the various
fields to produce detailed charts on any
metric.
The ability to track equipment has most
benefited CT and MR, says Luedtke. “Their
schedules are so tightly packed that tracking
allows them to move staff around to better
handle workloads.” Plus, it allows for
justification for new equipment if the time
comes. “If RVUs are going through the roof, we
know to add equipment and/or staff.” If one
location is low on staff for the procedures
scheduled, they can share staff members with
another location, ensuring better utilization
of staff.
Right now, the organization has one main
radiology group which services five hospitals.
The group rotates and uses worklists set up
within the RIS to divvy up the workload. That,
Luedtke says, “lets us get very good
utilization out of them.”
Distributing duties

Metro Imaging, a five-location radiology
practice in St. Louis, has been a Merge RIS
customer since 2003. In 2005, the practice
added Merge PACS and in 2006, its mammography
viewing software. Rather than tightening its
belt, the practice implemented digital
mammography when the DRA went into effect,
says Christine Keefe, CFO. “With the cuts,
everybody worried about buying new equipment,
but it turned out to be a real benefit because
it increased our volume and our
reimbursement.”
The practice also uses productivity measures
to improve its service and work distribution.
“We have transcriptionists in each location
with their own dedicated dictation system,”
says Keefe. By implementing Merge’s dictation
system, the transcriptionists can share the
workload. “It has really improved our
efficiency.”
The practice implemented a new service last
June—an onsite results program that lets
patients receive results before they leave the
office. “Patients love that,” says Keefe.
“It’s been a huge program for us that no one
else is doing.” PACS has given the practice
the efficiency to offer the service, but there
have been challenges. Technologists have to
spend more time with patients, explaining
their results. The radiologists also now have
more interaction with patients. By monitoring
productivity, Keefe says they can convert
exams to exam hours and see how many hours the
staff works per day or month or year. “That
lets us fine-tune our staffing.” Plus, if
there are any complaints over being
overworked, “a look at the numbers lets us
know if they truly are.”
Metro’s volume has grown by 4 percent since
beginning the program, but it hasn’t had to
hire any additional FTEs—radiologists or
technologists. PACS also lets the practice see
when some sites are busier than others and
even out the workflow between the
radiologists.
Monitoring is huge, says Keefe. “We’ve done
more monitoring of staff productivity than we
ever have, from each individual
transcriptionist to how many patients each
person has scheduled and checked in. We know
when to add staff and move people around. I
think it is a worthwhile effort.”
The last word

“To address market demands, especially the
impacts of DRA, we must increase our volume or
reduce expenses,” says Keefe. “Our biggest
expenses are equipment cost and staffing. We
won’t reduce staffing, because that could
impact patient care. It is difficult to reduce
equipment cost, because we have to continue to
upgrade equipment to stay competitive and
insurance plans are now ‘grading’ us on
quality care based on our equipment. So, we
must increase volume in a highly competitive
market. Because we have a strong PACS, we can
increase our throughput without increasing our
costs.”
Working to increase productivity makes it
“easy to forget we’re talking about saving
patients’ lives and providing high-quality
care,” says Lawson. “As we focus on
efficiency, we’re not for a moment letting go
of the patient in front of us.”