Defining an application service provider and a PACS is easy. The difficult issue is
explaining a PACS ASP and how it may best serve healthcare providers.
What is an application service provider? Why, thats easy.
An ASP is a company that provides computer services to clients remotely through the
Internet or some other network. What, then, is a PACS ASP? Well, thats
not
anywhere as simple to explain.
A huge industry has sprung up around picture archiving and communications. It includes
solutions for those facilities that need PACS, but cant leverage an in-house system,
or just dont want to buy one. For them, the most obvious answer is third-party
management that will store and back up their image files, make those files available
instantaneously upon demand, and in some cases, provide hardware and/or software. Many
such businesses blossomed a few years back, plugging customers into their proprietary
software via the Web.
Lately, the increasingly complex programming and vast storage required for such things
as multislice CT, 3D processing, cardiac files, Web servers and combined image/text
systems, such as RIS/PACS, have put staggering demands on remote Web-based hosting, making
it less practical for everyday use. And need we mention the security issues posed by
Internet use, or how image management technologies seemingly transform entirely every
week?
All of this and more have changed the application service provider market dramatically,
causing the acronym ASP to assume many meanings in its short existence.
Whats up with that?
What does ASP really mean today? There are as many answers to that question as
there are application service providers.
Really, ASP in the area of radiology has two applications today, says
Vishal Wanchoo, general manager for imaging and information systems at GE Medical Systems
Information Technologies (GEMSIT of Milwaukee). One is hosting archiving
applications off site, both primary archiving and disaster recovery. The other is hosting
radiology information systems off site.
There are two versions of ASP that we see out in the marketplace, says Paul
Unkel, director of radiology PACS at Philips Medical Systems North America (Bothell,
Wash.). One is the storage service provider [SSP] model, where everything is going
to be stored off-site and the customer will get it on demand. The other is what we call a
finance model. All that is, basically, is paying for a PAC system, as well as storage, as
you use them.
Please refer to the November 2002
issue for the complete story.
For information on article reprints, contact
Martin St. Denis