|
▼
U.S. Healthcare Providers Seen Growing IT Budgets by Over 10 Percent
Source:
TelecomWeb
Healthcare, a
sector that has experienced single digit growth for many years in terms
of investment in information technology (IT) -- long lagging behind
other industries -- is finally starting to heat up. That’is the
conclusion from a new report series based on interviews with more than
100 U.S. healthcare IT decision-makers by independent market analysts
Datamonitor.... “The U.S.
healthcare industry is responding to reports of very high fatality
numbers caused by medical errors each year. Institutions are beginning
to wake up to the fact that employing point-of-care IT is one of the
ways in which patient safety can be increased and medical errors
reduced,” Datamonitor Senior Healthcare Analyst Panni Kanyuk told
TelecomWeb. “A contributing factor is also the U.S. government’s
pronounced interest in healthcare IT -- through President Bush’s
proposal to develop standards for healthcare data interchange and also
the JCAHO’s [Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare
Organizations] proposed patient safety goals which would require barcode
technology at the patient bedside by 2007.”
(Read more...)
_________________________________
▼
Data
Storage Solutions Essential to Meet
HIPAA Recommendations
Source:
DataStoreX
Healthcare facilities in the United States are currently in a rush to meet the
Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) deadline for
security compliance. Data storage management solutions are likely to play a
key role in preparing these facilities to meet the HIPAA recommendations
regarding keeping patient record in a timely, secure, and organized manner.
New analysis from Frost & Sullivan, Data Storage Management Markets for U.S.
Healthcare Settings, reveals that revenue in this industry totaled $845.2
million in 2004 for storage hardware solutions, and projects to reach $1,329.6
million in 2008.
The market is already showing a marked increase in IT spending on security
system upgrades. Investment in picture archiving and communication systems
(PACS), electronic medical records (EMR), and computerized physician order
entry (CPOE) solutions expects to be among the top priorities. (Read more...)
0105
_________________________________
▼
JCAHO Bar Code, Pump Rules Coming
Source:
Health Data Management
While the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations
did not include proposed bar code and infusion pump requirements in its
final 2005 patient safety goals, those issues remain high priorities and
could become final in the 2006 goals.
(Read more...)
_________________________________
▼
Clinical Applications on Mobile Devices
Source:
Spyglass Consulting
Mobile Devices Face Significant Hurdles to Gain Wide
Spread Adoption Within Inpatient
Hospital Settings
According to a
recent market study by the Spyglass Consulting Group, mobile computing
usage among physicians has grown significantly over the past few years
through the use of standalone knowledge-based applications. More than 90
percent of clinicians interviewed under the age of 35 use some form of
reference application on a daily basis. Grass roots initiatives are
inciting large numbers of medical clinicians to independently purchase
handheld devices that are being used primarily for drug reference
databases, reference manuals and medical calculators.
Mobile computing
usage, however, face a significant number of obstacles to widespread
adoption in an inpatient hospital setting as the applications become
more comprehensive and require increased integration with existing
legacy-based clinical and financial systems, according to Gregg Malkary,
Managing Director of Spyglass Consulting Group.”
Key highlights of
the report:
• More than 92
percent of the clinicians interviewed were affiliated with healthcare
organizations that were using legacy-based systems completed by
inefficient paper-based processes and workflows. As a result, many of
these organizations are under a significant amount of pressure to invest
in clinical information systems to improve quality of care and patient
safety, increase clinician productivity and reduce the risk of medical
errors.
• E-prescribing has
been slow to take off within inpatient hospital settings due to high
initial deployment costs and lack of standards for electronically
transmitting orders to a pharmacy. Approximately 15 percent of all paper
prescriptions contain potential medication errors in which the patient
receives the wrong drugs, an inappropriate dose of the correct drug, a
drug to which they are allergic or a drug that interacts with another
drug they are taking. (Full
story...)
_________________________________
▼
An "Old" Trend Heats Up: Clinical Decision Support
By Mark Hagland
Source:
Healthcare Informatics
Clinical decision
support (CDS), a hot tech trend? To some, that might seem an oxymoron;
after all, the notion of CDS has been around for decades. What's hot
these days is how CDS seems finally to be coming into its own--becoming
more comprehensive, useful, integrated, real.
Signs are
everywhere, including at Partners HealthCare in Boston, where Blackford
Middleton, M.D., is helping lead the clinical IS charge. "Our current
strategy can be summarized very quickly," Middleton says. "We want to
implement a comprehensive EMR across the entire continuum of care"
(which the folks at Partners call a longitudinal medical record). "We
want to manage our knowledge assets carefully, as we recognize knowledge
as a critical asset. In other words, we want to invest in knowledge
management."
(Read more...)
_________________________________
▼
OR software helping hospitals better manage the business of surgery
By John Hall
Source:
Healthcare Purchasing News
Health First, a small southern Florida- based regional integrated
network, has set a lofty goal of becoming one of the nat'ions first
completely paperless healthcare organizations. As if that doesn’t raise
a few eyebrows, one of the departments which has nearly achieved that
goal is also one of the least likely: surgery.
Health First, which operates three hospitals on Florida’s east coast,
chose to excel in a department that could hardly be more demanding in
documentation and charting to test its mettle. Now, Health First is well
on its way. (Read more...)
► Learn
more about OR / Surgery software selection tool
_________________________________
▼
Assessing Privacy Risk in Outsourcing
By Margaret Davino
Source:
American Health Information Management Association (AHIMA)
Healthcare providers can outsource transcription, but they can’t
outsource their obligation to safeguard privacy. Here’s how to minimize
risk.
Healthcare providers are faced with multiple pressures, many of them
financial. The need for management to meet financial constraints often
translates into a desire to contract with vendors at the lowest possible
immediate cost, sometimes without thought as to the nonprice issues in a
contract.
It is important to linger over the legal issues that may be associated
with vendor contracts, especially with vendors that may subcontract
portions of their tasks. The October 2003 incident in which a Pakistani
subcontractor, in a dispute with a medical transcription company,
threatened to release patient information on the Web provided a dramatic
reminder of this. Provider and vendor liability has become even more
important in light of HIPAA privacy and security regulations, which
place an obligation on covered healthcare providers to ensure that their
vendors safeguard confidentiality. (Read more...)
_________________________________
▼
Faith-Based Spending
By Neil Versel
Source:
Modern Physician
Take everything you have ever heard about technophobic physicians, balky
computer systems, slow response times and tightwad finance departments.
Then throw it all out the window.
No matter what you may have been told in the past, physicians today
believe in information technology. They are going online in record
numbers, and their organizations are on board, too. E-mail usage is
rising, investment in electronic medical records is soaring, and the
phrase “clinical information systems” is no longer an oxymoron.
According to the sixth annual Modern Physician/ PricewaterhouseCoopers
Survey of Executive Opinions on Key Information Systems Issues, the
dynamics of information technology in medical practices have changed.
While few harbor illusions that a fully wired, seamlessly interconnected
healthcare industry is right around the corner, significant numbers of
the 436 survey respondents are getting more of what they want and need:
more money, more speed, more usage, more understanding and more
connectivity. And more is better. (Read more...)
_________________________________
▼
HIPAA Insecurity
By Debbie Gage
Source:
Baseline Magazine
If Chris DeVoney hustles, he can stay one step ahead of the hackers he
fears are going to steal patient records. But he doesn't dare rest. He
is the computing director at the clinical research center of the
University of Washington Medical Center. In the past year, he has
patched and installed software firewalls on 50 to 100 disparate medical
devices—everything from computers to printers to FDA-approved devices
that require bridging firewalls because no software can be loaded onto
them.
Last month, he cleaned up after an attack by the Witty worm, which
rewrote hard drives on 80 or so computers. The week before that, a
notebook computer was hacked as it tracked data emanating from sensors
attached to a subject who was sleeping as part of a research project.
The campus had to "cut the hacker out" by turning off Internet access to
the notebook so the study could be finished, says DeVoney.
The research center depends on the university's technology
infrastructure, and government budget cycles make it hard for the
university to buy what it needs when it's needed. Right now, for
example, DeVoney has no perimeter firewall. Nevertheless, in April 2005,
the Medical Center and thousands of other healthcare organizations will
have to comply with regulations to protect the electronic security of
patients' records—records that keep track of their physical or mental
conditions, their treatments and their healthcare insurance and
payments. Violations can incur civil penalties of up to $25,000 per
infraction per year, and criminal penalties of up to $250,000 in fines
and 10 years in prison. (Very small organizations have an extra year to
comply). (Read more...)
_________________________________
▼
Harnessing Efficiency: Workflow Automation
By Mark Hagland
Source:
Healthcare Inforamatics
What IT development will be needed for the full potential of most other
IT developments to be fully exploited in the coming months and years?
The simple answer, industry experts and IT leaders say, is workflow
automation. It has the ability to speed and integrate the full range of
available clinical, operational and financial IT as well as improve the
work lives of clinicians, executives and staffers by making things run
smoother and simpler.
The possibilities available with workflow automation are tremendous,
although everyone seems to have a different definition of precisely what
the concept means in practice. (Read more...)
_________________________________
▼
IT Opportunities in Radiology: Managing Digital Images with PACS
By Dee-Ann LeBlanc
Source:
IT Manager's Journal
PACS, the Picture Archiving and Communications System, is a vital
component in the future of both radiology and our medical
infrastructures. At a basic level, PACS is “filmless radiology,”
dispensing with those big x-ray films that we're so used to seeing TV
doctors hold up to the light, to make meaningful noises over as they
pretend to diagnose exactly what's going on inside their patient. In
reality this technology represents much more, especially in terms of
opportunities for programmers and other IT professionals who can help
hospitals become digital enterprises.
Where most people are most aware of PACS is looking at breakdowns of
clinical budgets. A PACS system today can run millions of dollars for
the full combination of servers, workstations, software, and training.
That price tag might seem like an excessive expense -- and in fact
radiology these days is often partially blamed for the high costs of
medical care -- until you look at the costs of film. Each piece of X-Ray
film costs roughly one US dollar, and this price is not likely to drop
since silver halide (and hence silver) is used in the process. Since
each patient trip to get X-Rays typically use five sheets of film for
even a simple problem, you can ascribe at least five US dollars to each
patient visit. That's not per patient, but per time that someone is sent
to have x-rays done.
According to Paul Nagy, Ph.D.-- an Assistant Professor of Radiology as
well as the Director of the Medical College of Wisconson's Radiology
Informatics Labooratory -- a large institution ("large" characterized
typically by five hundred or more beds) easily sends 200,000 people for
X-rays in a given year, meaning that X-rays can cost a hospital or
clinic one million US dollars for film alone. Steve Langer, Ph.D., the
Associate Professor of Diagnostic Physics and Imaging Informatics at
Mayo Clinic Radiology, adds that the costs of the chemicals required to
develop the film, maintaining the film processor, renting storage space
for the unused and used film, and paying the toxic waste disposal costs
of both the film and the chemicals boost the total material cost per
X-ray to 14 or more US dollars.
A PACS system that successfully replaces film can have a return on
investment (the vaunted ROI) within 18 months for medium and large
health care institutions. Of course, while a PACS can and should be
cost-effective, its largest benefit is its ability to help deliver
better, faster, and more efficient healthcare. To understand how this
is, you have to take a quick look at what happens with imaging when PACS
is not used. (Read
more...)
► Learn
more about PACS software selection tool
_________________________________
▼
Patient Records Healthy for Storage
By Dave Raffo
Source:
Byte and Switch
Driven by the need to store massive digital files and follow new
compliance regulations for patient records, healthcare is becoming a
booming market for networked storage.
"It's one of the fastest-growing segments of IT," says EMC's John Mello.
"There are two major applications: PACS and electronic patient records."
PACSs (picture archiving and communications systems) store cardiology
and radiology tests, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) results, and other
large files.
Healthcare storage needs have also expanded due to the Health Insurance
Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA), a federal regulation that
requires records to be kept longer. "They're taking all that off film
and making it digital," Mello says. "Those pictures take up a lot of
storage."
Still, Mello says healthcare is a late adopter of technology, claiming
that only about 5 percent of healthcare firms have sophisticated
electronic storage systems. He says that most large hospitals already
have them, while smaller and midsized facilities plan to implement them
soon. (Read
more...)
_________________________________
▼
Health-Care Vendors, Providers Call for More HIPAA Help
By M.L. Baker
Source:
eWeek
A coalition of health-care vendors and providers is urging the
government to make sure that health-care payments are not disrupted or
delayed as the industry moves to comply with new national standards for
electronic health-care records, which are required by the Health
Insurance Portability and Accountability Act.
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), the largest
health-care payer in the country, has stated that after July 2004 it
will no longer accept claims that don't meet HIPAA formatting standards.
But many of the intermediaries between health-care providers and CMS—the
ultimate payer—will not be able to process the claims, according to the
coalition, called the HIPAA Implementation Working Group. (Read more...)
_________________________________
▼
Chicago's Central DuPage Hospital to Offer Innovative Technology to
Staff, Patients
Source:
TMCnet
Sprint has reached a wireless solutions agreement with Central DuPage
Hospital that will enable it to become one of Chicago's most high-tech
hospitals. The innovative wireless solutions will allow nurses,
physicians and administrators to communicate instantly with each other
and obtain mobile access to important patient information from virtually
anywhere within the hospital, resulting in optimal patient care.
Under the agreement, Central DuPage Hospital will deploy the Sprint PCS
Vision Smart Device Treo(TM) 600 by palmOne, along with the Horizon
Mobile Care Rounding(TM) application by McKesson. This combination of
mobile handset and software will allow physicians remote access to
patient information both in and outside the hospital, including
real-time access to laboratory and radiology results, vital signs,
medication updates and patient history. This point-of-care communication
system contributes to improved patient safety and reduced costs, and is
part of a continuing joint effort by Sprint and palmOne, the world's
leading maker of handheld computers and highly acclaimed smartphones,
under their business solutions agreement to provide best-in-class mobile
solutions to the Healthcare industry. (Read more...)
|