Radiology services across Yorkshire transformed by new image sharing technology

Posted on: 16 April 2020

Radiology services across Yorkshire and the Humber are to be transformed by new technology which will allow organisations to view patient images and reports across seven NHS hospital trusts.

With demand on departments only increasing in response to the Covid-19 pandemic, this new technology enables the connected hospitals, which collectively cover a patient population of over 3 million, to diagnose patients who are transferred between sites at a much quicker rate than was previously possible.

Patients will also benefit from this new technology as, in some cases, it will reduce the number of scans a patient needs, lowering the amount of radiation they receive, as well as the number of visits the patient needs to make to hospital.

The Yorkshire Imaging Collaborative (YIC), the official name of the hospital trusts working together to improve radiology services, has accelerated the implementation of this new software, to support hospitals during the Covid-19 pandemic.

The following trusts will benefit from this new technology:

  • Airedale NHS Foundation Trust;
  • Bradford Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust;
  • Calderdale and Huddersfield NHS Foundation Trust;
  • Harrogate and District NHS Foundation Trust;
  • Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust;
  • Mid Yorkshire Hospitals NHS Trust;
  • Northern Lincolnshire and Goole NHS Foundation Trust; and
  • NHS Nightingale Hospital Yorkshire and the Humber Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust will be connected at a later date.

YIC is part of the West Yorkshire Association of Acute Trusts (WYAAT), a collaboration of hospitals working together to improve services for patients and staff.

Clinical Lead for the Yorkshire Imaging Collaborative, Daniel Fascia, said:
“This new technology will transform the way hospitals deliver radiology services to patients for the better. “Not only will the image sharing software reduce the time patients spend in hospital, it will allow for a quicker diagnosis and relieve pressures on radiology services across the region during this period of increased demand.”

 

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