Although 90-95 percent of cardiac catheterizations in the U.S. are performed through the femoral artery, but radial access has been found to be a safer, faster, more comfortable, and more cost-efficient approach. Because the large femoral artery is accessed through the groin, while the radial artery is much smaller and accessed through the wrist, femoral access is a more invasive procedure with higher risks and adverse consequences.
Related: What is a Cardiovascular Information System (CVIS)
Here are some of the reasons why providers should consider switching to radial access in their quest for the Triple Aim—better patient satisfaction, improved care, and lower costs.
Measuring and tracking your radial vs. femoral access with analytics is the first step toward changing physician behavior. Read this white paper for more about how this works and other ways to improve quality and increase margins in your cardiovascular service line.
Selecting the right imaging partner goes beyond replacing legacy PACS technology. Healthcare organizations must evaluate how a partner supports reliability, scalability workflow efficiency, innovation readiness, and measurable operational impact.
Radiologists struggle to share work across systems because each PACS manages workflow independently. Centralized workflow orchestration helps balance workloads, streamline collaboration, and scale reading operations across organizations.
EHR strategies fall short when imaging lives outside clinical workflows. True imaging integration embeds images directly into the EHR - eliminating context-switching, reducing duplicate exams, and enabling faster, more confident decisions across the enterprise.