This podcast from Banner Health focuses on the workflow redesign portion of mobile point of care.
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Posts Tagged ‘mobile point of care’
Newark Beth Israel: Mobile Point of Care
Tuesday, October 6th, 2009Representatives from Newark Beth Israel describe their new wireless infrastructure that makes their doctors and technicans more productive.
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Salford: Measuring the Value of Mobility at the Point of Care
Monday, October 5th, 2009Intel technologists discuss how they applied business value methodology to evaluate the impact of mobile point of care on Salford Hospital’s workload.
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St. Clares Heath System: Measuring the Value of Mobility at the Point of Care
Monday, October 5th, 2009The director of applications for the St. Clares Health System, responsible for integrating 135 applications across four hospitals, discusses the benefits of a mobile point of care system and how they were able to evaluate the benefits of adding more mobile devices.
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Stanford Hospital and Clinics: Mobile Point of Care
Monday, October 5th, 2009Dan Buckner, with Stanford Hospital and Clinics, describes their wireless network upgrade in the midst of a transition from IDX to EPIC.
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University of Kentucky Healthcare: Mobile Point of Care – from Proof of Concept through Implementation
Monday, August 31st, 2009Two years ago, Jan Bates, Director of Infrastructure Services, Medical Center Information Services says she and her colleagues recognized interest in—and a need for—mobility at the point of care at UK HealthCare. That led them on a path to searching for mobile point of care solutions for their organization. lthough it initially took some work to get the clinicians together to establish the proof of concept, it was an important step because the clinicians work together as a team at the bedside. Read the rest of the story on Mobile Point of Care – from Proof of Concept through Implementation (3:51, FLV).
Pharmacy Department Accrues Wide Range of Benefits in Mobile Point of Care Pilot
Saturday, February 14th, 2009The Macclesfield District General Hospital, part of the East Cheshire NHS Trust, introduced a Mobile Point of care pilot designed to evaluate the business value of using Mobile Clinical Assistants, based on Intel® mobile clinical assistant reference design, to better manage pharmacy workflows. One result: 27 per cent reduction in the number of missed doses and improving both patient safety and quality of care. Read more about the pilot in this case study. (more…)
