How autorouting works, Identifying images to be autorouted – Vista Imaging Vista Routing User Manual

Page 12

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Routing Overview

Routing User Guide

How Autorouting Works

The following figure illustrates the transfer of automatically routed images to a
VistARad workstation for remote reading. The processes outlined in this figure are
explained in more detail below. (Apart from the destination, the same processes are used
when autorouting images to a DICOM Storage SCP).

Image Gateway

Patient

data

Image Archive

Images

VistA

HIS

Routing Gateway

Remote Storage

Destination

Local image copies

VistARad

Image links

1) Eval. Processor
2) Trans. Processor

1

2

2

Sending Site

Destination Site

Modality

Images

VistARad login

Routing G/W

compares

image data

to routing rules (1)

Images

acquired

Image G/W

processes

images, then

archives images

Images

reviewed

at destination

Routing G/W

copies

routable images

to destination (2)

Identifying Images to be Autorouted

Autorouting begins with an Image Gateway. As it is processing newly acquired images, a
properly configured Image Gateway will add routing-specific entries to the rule
evaluation queue.

1

This queue is continually checked by the evaluation processor (which

resides on the VistA Host and is started from the Routing Gateway).

 If the Image Gateway is not configured to add entries to the rule evaluation queue, the

images being processed by the gateway cannot be autorouted. For more information,
see page

44

.

Each image referenced in the rule evaluation queue is checked against a set of
site-specific routing rules. If the rules indicate that the image should be routed, the
evaluation processor creates an entry in the transmission queue.

2

Entries in the rule

evaluation queue are deleted after they are checked.

1

The rule evaluation queue is a subset of the

IMAGE BACKGROUND QUEUE

file (#2006.03).

2

The transmission queue is stored in the

SEND QUEUE

file (#2006.035).

VistA Imaging V. 3.0, Patch 18

April 2006

4

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