February 01, 2012

iPad proves equal to regular screens for TB evals

BY Dr. Keith J. Kaplan

Admittedly, mobile small screen technologies afford portability and perhaps in some cases, access to basic health care services that would not normally be availalable.  True in pathology, just as it is radiology. Look for more news to come on this related to digital pathology.  Based on some recent papers I have reviewed for publication, small screen technologies will show their effectiveness for primary H&E diagnosis and extend the pathologist's reach.  

From: FierceMobileHealthcare

 By Sara Jackson Comment |  Forward | Twitter | Facebook | LinkedIn


iPads are just as good as LCD monitors when it comes to diagnosing tuberculosis, according to a follow-up study recently conducted by the University of Maryland.

The original study, which took place in mid-2010, tested only 30 images  found that the original iPad's resolution wasn't quite as good as that of LCD monitors and wasn't sufficient for a primary diagnosis.

In the new study, five radiologists tested 240 images–200 positive and 40 negative–on iPad 2 tablets and on a 27-inch Mac monitor. The agreement between the two displays was statistically equal, researchers report.

"Mobile displays should provide an effective extension of the radiologist's reach," researcher Samir Abboud told radiology news site AuntMinnie.com.

The two big negatives for the mobile technology were speed and size. All of the radiologists reported the iPad2 was far slower than the LCD monitor and that the screen size just couldn't compete with the larger monitor.

"It took, on average, twice as long to view the dataset on the iPad than on the traditional workstation," Abbout said. "Readers also commented on how much smaller the iPad's screen was compared to the 27-inch monitor."

The university's findings are an interesting turnaround for the industry, considering that experts reported to AuntMinnie last fall that tablets were "impractical" for viewing medical images, and likely would never take the place from LCD workstations.

"You won't find a radiologist who wants to read a chest X-ray off an Apple iPad," Dr. David Hirschorn, director of radiology informatics at Staten Island University Hospital said at the time.

To learn more
– read the AuntMinnie article (registration required)

Related Articles:
Mobile devices 'impractical' for medical image viewing
Carestream wins FDA approval for medical image viewing on tablets
RSNA: iPad helps untether radiologists from reading room

Read more about: table computersMobile HealthcareiPadhealthcare apps
back to top

 

OR

platinum partners

gold partners

Silver Partners

Media Partners