BridgeHead Updated Health Data Management Solution
New DICOM Archive Browser and support of open cloud storage Swift
This is a Press Release edited by StorageNewsletter.com on April 18, 2014 at 2:50 pmBridgeHead Software Ltd announced the newest release of its Healthcare Data Management (HDM) solution with a DICOM Archive Browser (DAB) and increased cloud support and support for the open cloud storage standard SWIFT.
These updates help make the solution a place to not only store the patient record but also now to access and manage it.
The DAB is an administrative tool that helps ensure the validity of the DICOM archive. It allows an administrator to search the archive by key metadata (e.g. patient ID, Instance UID) and also use BridgeHead’s XDS WADO interface to view any part of the series or study to ascertain that data is stored within the archive.
It can be used to:
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Send any study, series or image to any DICOM workstation allowing manual workflows to be constructed for ‘ologies where there is no automated PACS system;
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Manage Information Object Change Management (IOCM) requests in the archive, allowing an administrator to see images ‘hidden’ from general viewing.
“With its DICOM Archive Browser, BridgeHead has created an easy-to-use tool to aid administrators in managing DICOM images,” said Joe Marion, principal, Healthcare Integration Strategies LLC. “BridgeHead is unique to my knowledge in having worked to close this gap in the process, which is critical for supporting ‘ologies outside of radiology, such as oncology, with appropriate workflow. Indeed, I believe that administrators in radiology could also benefit from the added visibility and management control provided in the tool.“
Cloud Support – With added support for the OpenStack cloud storage standard SWIFT, it provides both its partners and customers with an interface to cloud resources via the SWIFT open object storage system.
At the same time, it also has added the ability to create offline copies of backups in the cloud by using de-dupe technologies, such as HP StoreOnce, to perform transfer to storage in the cloud while simultaneously creating an offline, most likely tape, copy of the backup, in the cloud. This gives an organization the efficiency of backup to cloud but at the same time gives them a tape copy of last resort, which is often critical to data protection strategy.
“The DAB is a good indication of how BridgeHead is making the content that it stores, protects and shares more accessible to the end-user, and how we can add more value to any Patient Records initiative, by making content available to users or applications in an ordered manner,” said Tony Cotterill, chief product officer, BridgeHead. “This is a first step towards a more robust patient-centric offering which we plan to introduce later this year, enabling clinicians to view all types of data associated with a patient from a single well-organized view.“