Blog | PatientImage

What Does PACS Stand For?

Written by Chad Hutchison | Nov 4, 2024 8:00:00 AM

The digital age has revolutionized modern healthcare systems, streamlining processes and enhancing patient care and comfort with more accurate and rapid diagnostics. However, with it comes the need to ensure patient privacy, which is protected by stringent laws like the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, or HIPAA.

PACS plays a crucial role in modern digital medical imaging. This article explores what PACS is, how it is used, and the benefits it offers medical professionals and patients, all while ensuring patient privacy. 

What Is a Picture Archiving and Communication System (PACS)?

PACS is an acronym for Picture Archiving and Communication System. It’s a system that archives and facilitates communications about images but is designed specifically for medical imaging. It is used in clinics, hospitals, and medical imaging facilities to store and transmit digital medical images and patient information securely.

Technologies like these are becoming essential in modern healthcare as the number of digital medical images from different devices, such as digital X-rays, MRI, ultrasound, and CT scans, grows. The need to store them digitally is only one aspect of this system. 

It also enables rapid access to those images for diagnostic and treatment decisions, allows for easy sharing when other specialists need to be called to view them, and stores them securely, protecting client privacy. 

What Are Cloud-Based PACS?

Cloud-based PACS are systems that store and back up the data they contain to a secure server located off-site. This helps facilitate easier data sharing from approved devices. The cloud-based storage it utilizes is extremely secure to ensure there is no violation of the numerous laws in the USA that govern data privacy, with few more stringent than the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, or HIPAA.

Using cloud-based systems offers many benefits, including daily backup, easy access to digital records, and low maintenance costs. 

The Four Basic Components of PACS

Imaging Modalities

PACS are tied to various imaging modalities, such as X-rays, CT, MRI, etc., and are involved in performing the scans for each digital imaging system.

Secure Network

The secure network is critical for uploading and transferring the images once they have been scanned. This step is done automatically without the need for further processing. 

Workstation

The system's workstation allows doctors and radiologists to view the images as they are produced. It allows them to examine image quality in case an image needs to be repeated while also enabling rapid diagnostics. 

Archives for Storage

The storage archives are also essential for securing and storing the data. The system automatically transfers scanned images via the secure network to a secure storage system where they are available immediately for anyone authorized to view them. 

What Is PACS Used For?

Their primary use is storing and managing digital medical imaging material securely, replacing traditional X-rays' old hard-copy films and physical archives. 

However, it’s more than simply a storage device. It allows doctors in different clinics to review the same information for rapid consultation on cases. It also offers an electronic platform that interfaces with other automated systems within a hospital or clinic, like hospital information systems (HIS), electronic health records (EHR), and radiology information systems (RIS), enabling simplified sharing of complete digital files. 

Finally, its ease and speed of use allow it to streamline and efficiently manage the workflow of patient exams due to its ability to store and share information automatically. 

How Is PACS Used Alongside Other Medical Imaging Technologies?

Since PACS utilizes DICOM (Digital Imaging and Communications in Medicine) protocols to store and transmit images, it enables it to easily interface with Hospital Information Systems (HIS) and Radiology Information Systems (RIS). 

It provides doctors and radiologists with immediate access to patient histories and the sharing of results from the RIS while helping the HIS manage the distribution of patient information throughout the clinic or hospital wherever it is needed.

The Benefits of PACS for Medical Professionals

Automation

PACS automatically transfers and stores medical images upon scanning, eliminating the need for processing and manual storage of past systems and significantly improving workflow efficiency. 

Compatibility

These systems are compatible with all common medical imaging modalities and with other healthcare systems, such as hospital information systems (HIS), electronic health records (EHR), and radiology information systems (RIS).

Organization

These systems keep patient images organized alongside the rest of the patient data. Since the data is stored digitally, it is much faster than sifting through paperwork.

Visualization of Images

They also offer various tools that allow for better visualization of medical images, including creating 3D images, which can be manipulated and rotated to allow for more accurate and rapid diagnostics.

Financial Savings

No need to process and print films or to physically store and retrieve them means you don’t have to pay staff to perform those services, improving workflow efficiency. Furthermore, no more paying for film, ink, or processing chemicals.

The Benefits of PACS for Patients

Rapid and Accurate Diagnostics

Since images can be done faster and are of higher quality than before, patients can benefit from quicker and more accurate diagnostics. 

Fewer Image Retakes

Since doctors can immediately view, store, and retrieve images, retaking them is unnecessary. Instead, they can simply be transferred electronically wherever needed. It improves patient experiences and reduces their radiation exposure.

Shorter Exam Times

Since everything is digital and automated, exams are quicker, easing patient comfort. They no longer have to wait while the film is processed before it can be viewed to determine if the image is diagnostic quality. 

Final Thoughts

Picture Archiving and Communication Systems (PACS) are pivotal systems in modern healthcare that have revolutionized digital imaging modalities' management, storage, and sharing. 

By streamlining processes and enabling rapid access to high-quality images, these systems enable more rapid and accurate diagnostics to improve patient care and clinic workflow efficiency. If you want to learn more about advanced cloud-based PACS systems, contact Patient Image. Our knowledgeable staff is available seven days a week to assist you.