Thursday, March 17, 2005

CeBIT 2005: The electronic healthcare card is coming…

In hall 9 at CeBIT, the first solution architecture for the electronic healthcare card was presented to German Health Minister Ulla Schmidt. This architecture, developed by the Fraunhofer Society on behalf of the joint self-governing body that represents the healthcare industry and the Federal Ministry of Health, describes the specific software roadmap – much like the detailed plans for building a house.



The healthcare card solution from Com, exhibited in both hall 9 and hall 26, dovetails seamlessly with this proposal. Siemens' solution centers around three different smartcards for patients, doctors and healthcare organizations. These chipcards permit access to patient information that is stored on central servers. Like electronic cash cards, the healthcare cards are PIN-protected to guard against abuse and manipulation. In addition, even doctors can only look up certain parts of a patient's record subject to the patient's own explicit consent. In other words, both cards must be read in and both PINs entered before access is granted.

Central data storage prevents unnecessary duplicate examinations and ensures that all doctors involved in treating a patient have up-to-date information at their fingertips. Similarly, prescriptions are no longer printed out but are instead stored on a central system. Pharmacists will in turn use their chipcards to access these prescriptions and hand out the corresponding medication.

A whole spectrum of smart add-on applications can also be run on the same underlying network infrastructure, all of which can sharply improve the quality of medical treatment. Examples include solutions that check prescriptions for contra-indications, and posting systems that automatically schedule operations or rehabilitation, for instance.

"The launch of the electronic healthcare card will trigger a far-reaching revolution that improves the quality of healthcare, makes it more economical and more transparent, and cuts out a lot of the red tape," said Schmidt. "Starting in 2006, the electronic patient record will gradually replace the health insurance card we know today. The healthcare card is the first application that has the technical capabilities to cope with the 700 million or so prescriptions made out every year. Electronic prescriptions also allow medication to be documented – a voluntary option for patients that can drastically reduce undesirable side-effects as a result of medical treatment. This documentation and the practice of creating prescriptions electronically alone will inject greater certainty into medical treatment and will generate savings of over a billion euros – both of which will benefit the patients."

Friday, March 04, 2005

CT advances win converts in cardiac imaging

http://www.diagnosticimaging.com/advancedCT/ct-carrington.jhtml

“I don’t do coronary MRs anymore. It’s just too time-consuming, and I can’t get a straight answer,”

-- compare to other modalities Cardiac CT imaging is leading now on.. hey,its not because im doing my master thesis in this area.. read an article below.. :D
its so great when u use the 64 slices CT.. I've tried once... so so so fast !
'It’s taken off very, very rapidly. don't blink ! :p '



Radiologists find that quickest way to a patient’s heart is through a CT scanner gantry

By Catherine Carrington

For anyone keeping an eye on advances in cardiac CT, don’t blink. Once dominated by coronary calcium screening and weighed down by controversy, cardiac CT has gotten a second wind, racing past technological obstacles and impressing former skeptics with its clinical promise.

Early research suggests that CT could become the preferred tool for noninvasive angiography, differentiate soft atherosclerotic plaque from its less vulnerable calcified form, and perhaps add a new dimension to myocardial perfusion imaging. Cardiac CT is being cheered on by both radiologists and referring clinicians.

“I’ve never seen a year in cardiac MR as I’ve seen in cardiac CT,” said Dr. Richard D. White, head of cardiovascular imaging at the Cleveland Clinic. “It’s taken off very, very rapidly.”

Electron-beam technology clearly is responsible for showing what CT can do when it images fast enough to stop cardiac motion. But credit for the enthusiasm that propels the field today lies with multidetector spiral CT, along with three-dimensional reconstruction technology, according to Dr. Lawrence M. Boxt, cardiovascular imaging chief at Beth Israel Medical Center in New York City.

“It allowed radiologists who were doing conventional CT to start doing cardiac CT. They didn’t have to buy a machine just for one organ,” he said. “With very fast scanners and the new 3-D reconstruction technology for handling stacks and stacks of data in a convenient manner, people started seeing the coronary arteries-and started thinking about going after them.”

While researchers are most excited about their progress in CT coronary angiography and intrigued by the possibility of perfusion imaging, other applications of cardiac CT have already become part of routine clinical practice. In some cases, CT is taking work away from established forms of cardiac imaging.

MR, for example, is being elbowed aside (see sidebar) as CT takes over the evaluation of large aneurysms of the thoracic aorta, particularly when stent-graft therapy is likely. Imaging to determine whether chest pain results from an abnormal pericardium is another example of an exam MR is ceding to CT, as is the initial evaluation of arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia.

“It’s now commonplace for us to first screen for arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia with CT, rather than MR, because we can quickly detect the likelihood of significant muscle disease of the right heart,” White said. “The first line of diagnostic workup in our institution is becoming CT. Then we go to MR when needed and do a more tailored examination.”

CT may also provide a noninvasive alternative to intravascular ultrasound in evaluating patients for transplant vasculopathy, and it is ideal for guiding certain electrophysiologic procedures, such as catheter ablation of atrial fibrillation. Often the source of the arrhythmia can be found at the opening of the pulmonary vein. CT can help determine which patients are good candidates for ablation by defining the size of that vessel and the pattern of its side branches. Providing guidance during electrophysiologic procedures is also a role CT could claim in the future, White said.

Coronary CTA: No Joke
When talk turns to noninvasive coronary angiography, CT is increasingly the subject matter. Many imagers say they have all but given up on MRA of the coronaries.

“I don’t do coronary MRs anymore. It’s just too time-consuming, and I can’t get a straight answer,” Boxt said.

Instead, he is one of several researchers fueling a flurry of studies into coronary CTA. Boxt expected to begin a study in October comparing CTA with conventional angiography in patients already scheduled for the cath lab. Even before that, he and his colleagues were performing coronary CTA under certain circumstances, such as the evaluation of coronary artery anomalies or low-likelihood stenoses. Boxt said he once considered cardiac CT a joke, but he has been impressed by the results.

“The pictures are just spectacular. When you electrocardiograph-gate, you see everything: the entire course of the right coronary artery, the left main becoming the circumflex, the anterior descending, and side branches,” he said. “We’re seeing incredible detail.”

Dr. Tom Brady, director of the cardiac imaging program at Massachusetts General Hospital, is a little more reserved in his praise of coronary CTA. At press time, he and his colleagues had compared the results of coronary CTA and conventional angiography in about 30 patients with known or suspected coronary artery disease. Early results suggested CTA’s overall sensitivity for coronary artery stenoses was in the range of 70%: better in the proximal portions of the coronary arteries and worse in the distal segments. The right coronary artery can also present a challenge, because it moves out of the plane of acquisition as the heart beats.

“CTA is coming along nicely, but it still needs more work. We need to decrease the temporal resolution of the acquisition and improve a couple of other technical parameters before it’s going to give us a great study every time from the coronary ostia all the way down to the apex. But I’m very bullish on it,” Brady said.

Not everyone is convinced of a clinical role for coronary CTA. Dr. William Stanford, a professor of chest and cardiovascular imaging at the University of Iowa, believes that a patient who has a high score on coronary calcium screening, for example, should probably have a nuclear stress test to look for perfusion defects caused by flow-limiting stenoses.

“That individual probably ought to go to cath, not only to define the anatomy, but also because you can do balloon angioplasty at the same time. I’m having trouble finding where CT angiography—though it’s talked about a lot—has a big clinical use,” he said.

White holds the opposite view. Even if it takes several years for CTA to fully overcome its limitations, its potential value remains high, he said. Just being able to tell clinicians that proximal arterial segments are clear may be enough to eliminate unnecessary conventional angiography in many cases, saving the patient from an invasive procedure and reducing healthcare costs.

“We don’t necessarily have to shoot for the stars to have an impact,” White said.

Soft Plaque
The proper role of coronary calcium screening in determining the risk of heart disease has been controversial and remains hotly debated. The subject is the center of a technological tug-of-war between electron-beam and multidetector technology. Just as studies increasingly supported its value as a cardiovascular risk factor, the attention of clinicians and researchers shifted to the identification of soft plaque.

Many researchers are observing what they believe to be soft plaque on CTA images. Since soft plaque does not show up on conventional angiography and is more likely to be unstable than calcified plaque, this finding has sparked intense interest. So far, CTA can’t reliably determine which soft plaques are stable and which are likely to rupture and cause a heart attack, but research is moving in that direction.

“Detecting segmental enlargement of the coronary artery and the presence of soft plaque is a pretty ominous sign, and we’re able to pick up on that even now,” White said. “I think we can get a hint of a less-than-desirable situation-one that hasn’t presented with symptoms yet-and maybe use this to monitor therapies directed at plaque progression.”

Perfusion Imaging
Mention myocardial perfusion imaging and CT in the same sentence, and the typical response is a blend of interest and skepticism. Dr. Ting-Yim Lee plans to turn skeptics into believers.

“CT perfusion imaging is here already. We can calculate blood flow maps in an ischemic model, and where you expect the ischemia to be, it’s there,” said Lee, a Ph.D. researcher at the John P. Robarts Research Institute and the Lawson Health Research Institute, both in London, Ontario. “The challenge facing us is to prove to the world that it really works.”

Lee has developed a method to quantify myocardial blood flow and distribution volume using contrast-enhanced multidetector CT. The results, displayed in pseudocolor maps, show perfusion defects and reveal the presence of infarcted tissue. But they also take advantage of CT’s spatial resolution to suggest whether the infarction is transmural or extends only partway through the myocardium. That’s something PET, perfusion imaging’s gold standard, can’t do.

“I’m very excited about this,” Lee said. “We’re using an ordinary CT scanner, we are injecting contrast using standard techniques that CT techs use day in and day out, and the time of scanning is less than 30 seconds. And out of that you get all this information.”

So far, Lee and his colleagues have studied dogs with experimentally induced ischemia, but they anticipate beginning studies in human heart patients next year.

The perfusion imaging protocol teams a four-slice multidetector CT scanner, ECG gating, and retrospective reconstruction of projection data selected from the end diastolic phase of the heart cycle, when the heart is nearly motionless. Perfusion studies are done following an intravenous injection of contrast. CT tracks the rate at which contrast passes through the aorta into the myocardial capillary network and then through various regions of the myocardium. From these two pieces of data, separate software that Lee has developed and licensed to GE Medical Systems-known as CT Perfusion 2-calculates blood flow, blood volume, mean transit time, and leakage of contrast from the capillaries into the myocardial interstitial space, and then creates a pseudocolor perfusion map.

For determining myocardial distribution volume, CT scanning is done first without contrast, then again after a continuous 30 to 60-minute infusion. Baseline images are subtracted from contrast-enhanced, steady-state images. An above-normal distribution volume would indicate the breakdown of myocardial cell membranes and leakage of contrast into the intracellular space, a sign of myocardial infarction. CT’s spatial resolution is high enough to show whether the increased distribution volume-and, hence, the infarct-extends through the myocardial wall.

Lee’s next step will be to validate his blood flow measurements against those determined with radiolabeled microspheres that have a diameter of about 15 micron-just large enough to pass through the coronary arteries and lodge in the myocardial capillaries. Assuming these animal studies go well, Lee plans to validate his technique in humans using PET as the quantitative gold standard.

White and his colleagues have had some success with CT perfusion imaging, detecting a few cases of myocardial infarction from perfusion defects observed while conducting contrast-enhanced CT of suspected aortic dissection. Still, he is convinced that CT perfusion imaging must overcome several obstacles before it can be accepted clinically. Lee’s technique requires slowing the heart rate to 60 to 80 bpm by administering medications like beta blockers, something that White prefers to avoid in sick patients. In addition, improvements in contrast agents that would enable them to pass less quickly through the coronary circulation would be helpful, he said.

“You can’t overlook some of the limitations of CT, including its speed. It’s not so fast that you can necessarily appreciate a first-pass effect, which is what is needed, given the agents at hand,” White said.

The imaging industry is advancing quickly to give researchers increasingly sophisticated tools, developing scanners capable of acquiring eight to 16 simultaneous slices of imaging data. In what could be an even bigger technological leap, volume CT systems are under development.

“Within the next five years we’re going to see the next generation of CT going the extra length,” White said. “I think we’re really seeing a new CT.”

Tuesday, March 01, 2005

Anggaran Kesehatan Kompensasi BBM Sering Tidak Tepat

http://www.kompas.com/utama/news/0503/02/010801.htm

Penggunaan anggaran untuk kesehatan yang bersumber dari alokasi kompensasi kenaikan harga BBM sering tidak tepat sasaran dan banyak pihak yang ikut "bermain" dalam pengadaan peralatan kesehatan yang dibiayai dari dana kompensasi bidang kesehatan.

Demikian salah satu intisari Bincang Malam bertema "Mencermati Alokasi Anggaran untuk Kesehatan Rakyat" yang diselenggaran TVRI Stasiun Pusat Jakarta, Selasa (1/3) malam. Perbincangan menghadirkan Anggota Komisi IX (bidang kesehatan) Tamsil Linrung, pengamat kesehatan Sulastri dan Ketua Yayasan Pemberdayaan Konsumen Kesehatan Indonesia Marius Wijajarta.

Tamsil Linrung menjelaskan, anggaran kesehatan pada APBN 2005 baru mencapai 1%, padahal standard WHO semestinya minimal 5%. Karena itu, keberadaan anggaran tambahan untuk bidang kesehatan dari alokasi kompensasi kenaikan harga BBM amat penting.

Hanya saja penggunaanya harus tepat sasaran dan pengawasan publik harus makin ditingkatkan. Dalam kaitan ini, DPR akan meningkatkan efektivitas pengawasan penggunaan dana kesehatan.

Terkait anggaran kesehatan itu, Sulastri mengungkapkan, selain pengawasan yang harus lebih efektif oleh berbagai pihak, penggunaan anggaran untuk pembelian peralatan kesehatan harus lebih didasarkan pada kebutuhan setiap rumah sakit dan Puskesmas. Artinya, peralatan yang dibeli dari dana alokasi kenaikan harga BBM untuk bidang kesehatan harus dibebaskan dari permainan bisnis dan percaloan.

Ditambahkan, pembelian kesehatan sering diwarnai intervensi bisnis dan KKN oknum anggota DPR dan pejabat di Departemen Kesehatan. Akibat praktek percaloan dan KKN, anggaran kesehatan yang digunakan hanya berkisar 40%, sedangkan sisasinya tidak jelas penggunannya. Selain itu, percaloan dan KKN membuat harga menjadi mahal dan sering tidak sesuai dengan kebutuhan masyarakat.

"Banyak peralatan yang dibeli tidak berfungsi karena tidak sesuai standard kebutuhan rumah sakit atau Puskesmas," kata Sulastri yang juga Direktur Eksekutif Lembaga Pengembangan Etika Masyarakat.

Senada dengan Sulastri, Marius juga mengungkapkan, praktek percaloan dan KKN dalam pembelian peralatan kesehatan dengan dana alokasi kenaikan BBM telah berlangsung lama. Pratek itu merupakan kelanjutan dari praktek yang telah terjadi puluhan tahun lalu. "Peralatan yang benar-benar dibutuhkan kadang tidak ada. Namun datang alat yang sebenarnya tidak terlalu dibutuhkan," katanya.

Reaksi keras

Adanya dugaan permainan dan percaloan dalam pembelian peralatan kesehatan dari luar negri yang dibiayai dari dana kompensasi kenaikan harga BBM mendapat reaksi keras dari anggota Fraksi Partai Demokrat (FPD) Max Sopacua. "Praktek seperti itu harus diakhiri dan diberantas. itu paradigma lama," kata Max kepada pers.

Max menyatakan, DPR periode saat ini merupakan DPR baru yang akan berusaha lebih efektif melakukan pengawasan. Jika ada anggota DPR dan pejabat Depkes yang ikut bermain dalam pengadaan peralatn kesehatan harus diungkap.

Max juga mengatakan, DPR dan semua pihak semestinya melakukan pengawasan penggunaan anggaran kesehatan dengan strategi baru agar pengunannya tepat sasaran dan peralatan yang dibeli pun tepat sasaran.

Di DPR, kata Max, selain pengawasan dilakukan di Komisi IX juga dilakukan Panitia Anggaran. Masyarakat dan LSM juga harus berani mengungkap ketidakberesan dalam penggunaan anggaran kesehatan ini. Di tingkat internal Depkes, pengawasan harus pula ditingkatkan.

"Penyimpangan sekecil apapun harus diungkap dan diusut tuntas. Jangan biarkan dana kesehatan untuk masyarakat miskin tidak tepat sasaran,’ katanya.

Dia yakin, apabila pengawasan ditingkatkan dan perencanaan penggunaan anggaran kesehatan lebih didasarkan pada perencanaan yang baik, alokasi anggaran ini akan tetap sasaran dan praktek masa lalu akan terkikis