Intel and Cisco WLAN Deployment Guide for Healthcare

Mobile technologies have demonstrated maturity in large enterprises, empowering workers and boosting productivity by greatly increasing access to tools and information. Adoption of mobile technologies continues to increase, with wireless networks becoming nearly ubiquitous in Fortune 5001 campus environments.

Unlocking Medical Information

When Baptist Health of Northeast Florida started planning its move to a paperless healthcare environment, management from the CEO on down were clear on one thing: Unhindered access to digital information would be critical. Today, Intel® technology-based mobile point of care (MPOC) solutions are enabling new ways to work and deliver care at two of Baptist Health’s community hospitals, and the remaining three are on track for conversion by early 2008.

The results are pervasive. “There is no aspect of clinical practice and no corner of the clinical care environment that hasn’t been impacted and improved by having mobile, simultaneous access to digital health information,” says Keith Stein, MD, chief medical officer at Baptist Health.

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A Clinician Usability Pilot: Improving Quality of Care and Workflow Efficiencies Using Mobile Technology

The University of California San Francisco (UCSF) Medical Center was an early adopter of the electronic health record. In 2002 the medical center began implementing IDX’s Carecast®, (now GE Healthcare’s Centricity Enterprise) and found it very useful to have a single source for patient data. The obvious next step was to add a mobility component to the equation to make it easier for clinicians to access that data at the point of care. UCSF’s initial step toward mobility was to implement computers on wheels (COWs). COWs were preferable to stationary PCs. However, UCSF soon found they came with substantial drawbacks such as expensive batteries with limited charge. Furthermore the COWs took up space in the hallways and were hazardous obstacles at the bedside in emergency situations. The COWs required a significant amount of maintenance, and, since they were shared, there was limited availability and clinicians were often frustrated with the amount of time it took to log on and off the COWs during a given shift. UCSF’s leadership realized that while COWs had helped the institution move away from a stationary system, they could not provide the level of safe, convenient, and efficient mobility UCSF needed going forward.

NHIN Forum to Demonstrate AHIC priorities

On December 15-16, seven American Health Information Community (AHIC) priority use cases will be demonstrated as part of the Nationwide Health Information Network (NHIN) December forum.

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Webinar from Motion Computing & Panasonic H1 Customer Events

In Marc Holland’s (IDC) blog posts of Nov. 7 ("Computing goes mobile") and Nov. 10 (" More guidance ...), he gave us some guidance on what to look for in a mobile clinical assistant system and talked about the Motion C5 device and Panasonic’s new Toughbook H1.

Wireless LAN is the Prescription for Innovation at The Alfred

Medical images and patient information delivered wirelessly to bedsides help improve patient care and boost staff productivity within Australia’s largest ICU facility

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What we’ve heard from the HGM community about managing change

In advance of our upcoming webinar on Jan. 29, we polled the early registrants to see what their questions are regarding the topic: Managing Change: How to Overcome Obstacles and Encourage Mobile Technology Adoption. Proving value, security issues and technology integration are all areas of concern for our community.

Here's a preview of some of the questions that caught our attention, submitted directly from community members who are out in the field dealing with these real-world issues:

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What we can learn from the Most Wireless Hospital Awards

Earlier this year,  Hospitals & Health Networks published the 25 Most Wireless hospitals list, along with its prestigious 100 Most Wired hospitals.  We're just starting to learn how these hospitals overcame the obstacles that can come up when moving to mobile point-of-care.