Ultrasound: The Next Generation | March/April 2000 | ImagingEconomics.com
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Features Ultrasound: The Next Generation By Wendy J. Meyeroff In order to have the widest possible impact on patient care, the increasingly sophisticated modality of ultrasound must find an appropriate level of reimbursement. Ultrasound's changes are incremental, not revolutionary," says A. Thomas Stavros, MD, medical director of ultrasound and noninvasive services at Radiology Imaging Associates in Englewood, Colo.
For other publications within our company, click here. Technological change, nonetheless, is transforming the landscape of ultrasound, and many of its practitioners believe that further breakthroughs are on the horizon. New contrast agents, advances in harmonics, and real-time imaging are expected to be solidly established in the field within 3 to 5 years, leading radiologists into diagnostic and even treatment areas unimagined not so long ago. Shadowing the modality's advances, however, are concerns that the rising cost of equipment and tightening reimbursements will thwart the promise of state-of-the-art technology.
REAL TIME, REAL ADVANTAGE One advance that is already here (although not fully utilized) is http://www.imagingeconomics.com/library/200003-06.asp (1 of 8) [9/16/2004 1:28:57 AM]