Cooperation between physicians in hospitals in rural areas can be assisted by desktop-conferencing using a satellite link. For six weeks, medical desktop-conferencing was tested during daily clinical conferences between the Virchow-Klinikum, Berlin, and the Medical Academy, Wroclaw. The communications link was provided by the German Telekom satellite system MCS, which allowed temporary connections to be established on demand by manual dialling. Standard hardware and software were used for videoconferencing, as well as software for medical communication developed in the BERMED project. Digital data, such as computed tomography or magnetic resonance images, were transmitted by a digital data channel in parallel to the transmission of analogue video and audio signals. For conferences involving large groups of people, hardware modifications were required. These included the installation of a video projector, adaptation of the audio system with improved echo cancellation, and installation of extra microphones. Learning to use an unfamiliar communication medium proved to be uncomplicated for the participating physicians.
A PC-platform is presented using internet technology on Ethernet (local) or ISDN (external) for access to digital hospital infrastructures comprising electronic multimedia patient records integrating information systems of all clinical departments. In addition, a videoconferencing system is implemented for teleconsulting, and a document camera allows transmission of analogue data. In combination with the multimedia-PC. Ethernet as well as ISDN offer satisfying performance for transmission of medical data including images. In 20 cases, visualisation of the electronic patient record, an average CT with report and 58 GIFF Images', or transfer of an ACR-NEMA file from CT, took seconds (Ethernet) or up to 3.5 minutes (ISDN - 58 CT images and report).
The collaboration between physicians is supported in the BERMED project by implementing the remote access to distributed patient data and the realisation of computer-based medical conferencing. This requires the integration of the multimedia data in form of a meta-patient record for our medical application systems. These applications are supported by a distributed information management promoting access to different information systems, imaging modalities and digital archival storage systems. The features of image processing are concerned with quantification, segmentation and 3-D-visualisation to obtain additional information. This paper gives an overview of the actual state of the teleconferencing system in radiology.
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