2019
DOI: 10.1016/j.jacr.2019.05.053
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The Current State of Teleradiology Across the United States: A National Survey of Radiologists’ Habits, Attitudes, and Perceptions on Teleradiology Practice

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Cited by 52 publications
(39 citation statements)
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“…A recent survey [6] found that 45% of radiologists not affiliated with a teleradiology company interpreted imaging studies remotely. Radiology practices may choose to cover a fixed percentage of their projected volume internally and rely on teleradiology firms or spot-market and business-tobusiness radiologist hires to handle any incremental volume, thus reducing their fixed labor costs.…”
Section: Employment Compensation and Practice Structurementioning
confidence: 99%
“…A recent survey [6] found that 45% of radiologists not affiliated with a teleradiology company interpreted imaging studies remotely. Radiology practices may choose to cover a fixed percentage of their projected volume internally and rely on teleradiology firms or spot-market and business-tobusiness radiologist hires to handle any incremental volume, thus reducing their fixed labor costs.…”
Section: Employment Compensation and Practice Structurementioning
confidence: 99%
“… 20 Teleradiology offers immense promise during the pandemic for maintaining workforce safety, achieving geographic, after-hours and multispecialty coverage, as well as improving coverage of underserved areas. 21 , 22 During the pandemic, to maintain workforce safety, home workstations and remote reading can be utilized where possible. For example, the University of Washington radiology department has accelerated the process of providing home workstations and upgraded their Picture Archiving and Communication Systems (PACS) servers to support an increased volume of radiologists doing remote interpretation.…”
Section: It and Infrastructurementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Careers in teleradiology are diverse and can include general radiology, subspecialty radiology, split time between inperson and teleradiology, nighthawk services Q6 , and more. There are now many large private teleradiology groups in the United States that offer autonomy, flexible hours, choice of subspecialty or generalized radiology, opportunities for promotion, and leadership [5]. Some teleradiology groups will allow you to work in an in-person group, including working part-time.…”
Section: Teleradiologymentioning
confidence: 99%