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Radiologist- and technologist-related errors to blame for most musculoskeletal MRI recalls

MRI

These errors are frequently due to a breakdown in communication between radiologists, technologists and referring providers, either before or during exams, according to a new analysis of more nearly 63,000 musculoskeletal MRI exams.

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Why hospitals suffered financially in 2022—and a look ahead to 2023

Diagnostic imaging radiology and the emergency room direction signs at Northwestern Medicine Central DuPage Hospital in the Chicago western suburbs.

Health Exec caught up with Erik Swanson, senior vice president of data and analytics at Kaufman Hall, to learn more about the underlying trends throughout 2022 and what hospitals are bracing for in 2023.

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AI specialists ink deal with Pfizer to target cardiac amyloidosis

heart.png

Cardiac amyloidosis can be especially challenging to identify and diagnose, making it a perfect target for advanced AI models.

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VIDEO: Top priorities for the Medical Group Management Association in 2022

Claire Ernst, director of government affairs, Medical Group Management Association (MGMA), explains the list of priorities for the association. These include staving off the large, planned 2023 Medicare reimbursement cuts, fighting for continuation of reimbursements for telehealth, and revamping prior authorizations.

Claire Ernst, director of government affairs, Medical Group Management Association (MGMA), explains the list of priorities for the association, include staving off the large Medicare reimbursement cuts, continuation of telehealth reimbursements, and revamping prior authorizations. 

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JACR’s top 5 articles of 2022

The Journal of the American College of Radiology has named five peer-reviewed papers its best of the year.

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RadNet subsidiary gets green light for breast density AI

Green Light

The FDA has cleared software that automatically assesses density of breast tissue on mammography.

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New discovery could reduce the risk of heart damage among cancer patients

Researchers found the reason radiation and anthracyclines in some patients causes cardio toxicity may be due to the cGAS–STING pathway. This holds great potential as a treatment to prevent cardiac complications of DNA-damaging cancer treatments in new cardio-oncology research. Pathology Laboratory
Photo by Artem Podrez via Pexels

Researchers have identified new details about the link between certain cancer therapies and heart complications. Could their work lead to key improvements in patient care?

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Appetite for AI, portability likely to shape future MRI design

An RSNA attendee undergoes an MRI brain scan on the expo floor using the Hyperfine Swoop head MRI system. It is self-shields with a low field 0.064 T. It uses a standard wall power outlet and can be wheeled through a standard 34-inch wide door frame. It weighs 1,400 pounds. Imaging sequences include T1, T2, FLAIR, and DWI (with ADC map) and its operational controls are all directed on an iPad interface. #RSNA #RSNA22

An RSNA 2022 attendee experiences portable brain MRI from the patient perspective. (Photo by Dave Fornell) 

MRI scanner OEMs will soon face increased pressure to differentiate machines in their R&D pipelines with superconducting magnets, open designs, AI integrations and—maybe most challenging—potential for portability.

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COVID-19 vaccines prevented 3M deaths

There has been fear of a small number of patients who experience myocarditis after COVID vaccination, but a new study found it is safe in patients with prior heart damage. Image courtesy of Banner Health. #COVID19 #COVIDvaccination

Image courtesy of Banner Health

An estimated 3.2 million excess deaths and 18.5 million hospitalizations have been prevented due to COVID-19 vaccines, the Commonwealth Fund found.

 

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CMS cites 'newly published evidence' in postponement of PET coverage decision

Prior to the Dec. 15 announcement, CMS had released a different statement in June informing the public that they were reconsidering the amount of PET scans that Alzheimer’s patients undergoing monoclonal antibody treatment can receive.

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