November 15, 2024

ACR Learning Network Vendor Partner Program Accelerates and Eases Radiology Site Quality Improvement

ImPower Program Facilitates Tailored Software Solutions and Administrative Support to Fuel Large-Scale QI Advancements

 

The ACR Learning Network Vendor Partner Program provides health systems and radiology practices a combination of customized software solutions and expert project support to accelerate local quality improvement efforts (QI). The ACR® ImPower program, part of the ACR Learning Network, connects sites with Vendor Partners, resources, expertise and a structured approach to help them more easily identify, train and support multi-department QI teams to overcome real-world challenges and achieve more effective, efficient care.


Inflo Health and Radloop are the first two ACR Learning Network Vendor Partners. Vendor Partner status is non-exclusive, available to all vendors who meet qualifications and remains active for three years. The ACR expects to welcome more Vendor Partners in the coming months.

“The ACR thanks Inflo Health and Radloop for stepping up to become the first two ACR Learning Network Vendor Partners,” said David Larson, MD, MBA, chair of the ACR Commission on Quality and Safety and founding director of the ACR Learning Network. “We encourage other radiology software vendors to seek Vendor Partner status; we have the shared goal of helping their customers get the most out of their products to impact patient care.”

Vendor Partners serve an essential role by working alongside site project teams to apply collaborative measures and manage system functionalities. Partners capture and support project teams in completing data audits, validating audit results and reporting performance data.

“Our partnership with ACR ImPower and the ACR Learning Network exemplifies how combining advanced technology with strategic collaboration can set new standards in radiology practices and operational excellence," says Angela Adams, CEO of Inflo Health.

“The ACR Learning Network prioritizes real-life testing and the rapid iteration of creative solutions in a data-driven process, producing better outcomes for our clients and their patients,” said Richard Friedland, MD, CEO of Radloop.

Each ImPower cohort offers different topic-focused improvement collaboratives, guided by QI leaders and clinical subject matter experts. Multidisciplinary local project teams learn QI methods and directly apply QI tools to improve their performance over a defined time. To date, 34 organizations have completed 42 projects through ImPower.

“Collaborating to advance patient outcomes requires that local teams develop a shared understanding of the challenges, utilize a systemic quality-improvement process and make use of commonly accepted performance measures,” said Dr. Larson. “By working with vendor partners to integrate tailored software solutions into their workflows, sites can focus on effective resource management, increasing quality, efficiency and throughput.”

Software vendors, healthcare administrators, physicians and staff are invited to attend ACR ImPower demonstrations in the ACR Booth (#3129) at the Radiological Society of North America (RSNA) Meeting on:

• Monday, Dec. 2 at 11am CT
• Tuesday, Dec. 3 at 1pm CT

Interested vendors can attend a post-RSNA meeting webinar on December 17 at 3pm ET to learn more about how to qualify as an ACR Learning Network Vendor Partner.

To speak with a spokesperson, contact ACR Public Affairs at PR@acr.org.

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The ACR ImPower project is part of The ACR Learning Network, which was established via a grant from the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, a philanthropic entity that supports measurable, durable solutions to important problems, including those in healthcare.*

The American College of Radiology® (ACR®), founded in 1924, is a 42,000-member medical association that advances patient care, medical practice and collaborative results through advocacy, quality standards, research and education.

*The content provided in this release is solely the responsibility of the ACR and does not necessarily represent the official views of the Moore Foundation.