A Radiology Fairy Tale...
Or
- Adventures in Professional PACS Training and Customer
Satisfaction
For my non
medical or non imaging friends out there…
PACS stands for:
Picture
Archiving and Communication Systems-PACS refers to all of the equipment and
systems involved in viewing and storing your digitally acquired, medical images. (think Xrays, Ultrasounds, CT scans, MRi’s etc... )
ON the viewing/clinical side we have the
radiology technologists who generally acquire the images, while working in
conjunction with the radiologists who subsequently interpret them.
On the Archiving/Storage
side of the equation, we have the IT/Computer/Technical folks who do their part
to make the miracles of filmless viewing, virtual colonoscopies and 3D
reconstruction a reality.
Both sides of
the house need each other and both sides often drive each other crazy while
attempting to pull off the seemingly impossible.
It should be
noted however, that while it is common for individuals to transition from the clinical
side of the house to the more technical, storage side, it is extremely rare for
anyone innately technical, to make the clinical transition.
This speaks
to the personality types involved, as well as the theory that data centers are probably similar
in construction to The Hotel California…
Here we go with our story:
Once upon a
time, there was a PACS. This PACS was
one of the finest in the entire kingdom.
Radiologists and technologists alike, spoke of it in hushed, reverent
tones. They were enchanted by its
ability to enable physicians
and healthcare professionals to manage, access and visualize multi-specialty
medical content across the enterprise using advanced visualization tools, clinical content management and clinical workflow through
a dynamic user interface.
As
wonderful as this particular PACS was, it was also well established throughout
the kingdom that the epoch of implementation, as it was referred to, was, at
times, fraught with obstacles. Many of
these obstacles had nothing to do with the beauty and efficiency of the
system. Nay, it was often puzzling to
the many Knights of the Implementation Council that the very radiologists who
wanted and needed the system, were oftentimes, themselves the source of the
conflict. Many roundtable discussions
were held in order to solve this mystery of conflict and customer
dissatisfaction.
During
these Roundtable discussions, legends and tales from Implementations throughout
the land were shared in order that they might consult with one another to decipher
the lessons contained within, such that quality solutions to problems could be
revealed.
It was
once upon a particularly illustrious Roundtable discussion, that the tale of
the Mouse and the Keyboard was first told:
Legend
has it, that it was during a session whereupon one of the Knights of the
Implementation Council was bestowing upon a radiologist the wisdom and
understanding of the PACS, that one particularly startling incident occurred.
The PACS configuration contained 4,
Grayscale, Resolution of the Highest Monitors, of the House of Siemens, in
combination with a Color Monitor, descended from the Lordship of the House
known as Dell. It was this Dell,
whereupon the exam list was displayed and the private healthcare information of
the subjects’ of the PACS was made known.
The cursor, which was the onscreen
representation of the relative location of the mouse upon the desktop, had to
travel vast distances across the 5 monitor expanse.
Here is what a typical workstation might look like:
The
critical moment of this story occurred when the radiologist, who had been
disregarding the amount of desktop space necessary for mouse movement, caused a
collision of the Mouse, upon the Keyboard.
The cursor, which he desired to situate upon the patient list,was
trapped upon the landscape of monitor number 4.
No further leftward movement was possible due to the keyboard’s
impedance upon the mouse’s leftward most pathway.
Observers
gaped in amazement at the transgression, yea, many fled the room, in fear of
witnessing what horrors might befall the ensnared cursor.
The
radiologist registered a customer dissatisfaction issue with the Knight of the
Implementation Council that such behavior was an unacceptable feature of the
PACS, and that it would need to be corrected by the Knights of the Engineering
Council before he would ever again lay his hands upon the PACS.
Silence
fell upon the darkened room.
All
eyes were upon the Knight of the Implementation Council, whereupon, she most
bravely and fortuitously reached towards the keyboard, with utter disregard for
her own personal safety, slid it forward, in such a manner, as to disrupt
the keyboard’s negative interference upon the Pathway of the Mouse. This swift
action created more usable surface area, whereupon,the Mouse and the Cursor were then both
easily returned to the first monitor, that of Dell.
The
radiologist nodded in satisfaction and the Project Manager, He of the Highest
Order, confirmed that the solution was one of both quality and genius.
The PACS
was saved and the Dominion of the PACS Company prospered
ever after. (Until such time as it was sold and the name was changed)
There
are many notable and almost seemingly comical stories and fairy tales in the
world of PACS Implementation. The above
story, while thematically framed, recalls an actual incident and challenge in
the field.
All fairy tales have something to teach us. The mouse and the keyboard were functioning
properly; there was nothing wrong with the application. The doctor merely ran out of mouse
manipulation room and did not know that he could simply pick the mouse up, move
it several inches to the right, and recover his cursor.
To those of us familiar
with computers, this seems like such a simple and intuitive thing to do. It was
not intuitive for this doctor. Covering for his embarrassment, he lashed out at
everyone in the room and declared the system a failure. Immediate intervention was required, in order to convert a potentially sales killing, customer experience, to a more positive encounter.
The lessons
in this, and the challenge to all of us, is to be prepared to take a creative
approach, in order to be able to train people to utilize any system, regardless
of the current level of computer literacy in which we find them.
There have been times when I have had to
start from the beginning and teach a radiologist how to point and click with a
mouse. I would start them off with
solitaire and work my way back to the medical applications.
Conversely,
many radiologists are very skilled and comfortable with computers and have presented
me with different sorts of challenges. Hyper-light
speed mouse clicks, borne of impatience and the need for rapid throughput, can
create unwanted situations and give the appearance of poor system performance
as well.
“Semper Gumby”- Always Flexible has been my guiding philosophy in this
arena.
While
I maintain a general lesson plan that I like to follow in order to ensure
thoroughness, oftentimes the needs of the radiologist will dictate that the
script needs to be abandoned, and spontaneity becomes the order of the
day. The less we, as trainers, regard
this not as a threat, but more as an opportunity to shine, the greater the
likelihood of high, customer satisfaction, regardless of industry.
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