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Benefit from a clinician designed Digital Medical Record to meet your hospital's unique needs

Manage patients clinical data digitally and integrate with your healthcare or hospitals existing systems to have a 360-degree patient view.

Efficiently manage patient's clinical data to impro+ve outcomes, save time and make better decisions.

Benefit from a clinician designed digital medical record that inspires user adoption, retains your existing processes & workflows, increases patient safety and reduces costs.

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We believe that technology is central to helping end users work more efficiently, providing better services and outcomes to patients, while also reducing costs.

 

  • St George's Hospital, New Zealand "Clinicians can now access patient information on the move, we have seen a positive impact on patient discharge times"
  • A Calvary Hospital, Australia "There has been a 75% saving in the costs associated with becoming paperless and these costs are continually decreasing"
  • BreastScreen Victoria, Australia "The new digital whiteboard has improved patient flow, providing for a better experience for both patients and staff"
  • LauraLynn Children's Hospice, Ireland "The time taken to locate historical data within the patient record has been reduced by 66%"

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Collaboration in Healthcare - Everyone Matters



"Neil Jordan, Worldwide General Manager of the Health Industry for Microsoft. Doctors, specialists and other healthcare professionals need to be able to share the most up-to-date information, whether they are in a hospital or clinic, treating a patient, travelling between facilities or teleworking. They need communication and collaboration tools that help them connect with each other and with critical information to improve their performance and reduce errors."


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“make them use it” is not a valid EMR adoption strategy



"Of course we are all aware that a traditional EMR rollout is a huge financial commitment (thus raising the financial risk considerably, in addition to the operational risk of upending the healthcare organisation for a minimum of two years while the project is implemented). In many cases, those risks are well flagged and whilst typically underestimated, they have at least been given strong consideration. However the biggest risk to such a project is usually one that doesn’t receive much attention – user adoption"


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EMR Implementation – Big Bang or Phased Approach?



"One question that we have come across with clients time and time again is “How should we implement an EMR?” This usually refers to whether a hospital should take a Big Bang approach to the implementation of Electronic Medical Records or phase it in over time. One of the largest concerns with hospital management during the implementation of an EMR are..."


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Vitro News

Are we MAD?

Author: Vitro Software/Thursday, April 24, 2014/Categories: Insights

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It was never more evident to me than today when I picked up a healthcare IT magazine from 4 years ago and compared it with the current copy that not much has changed in Health IT; we are still dealing with the obstacles of sharing a patient’s medical information. And we’re not talking about healthy patients or those concerned with privacy…this is a record of someone being transferred from an Aged Care Facility (ACF) to an Acute Facility; those who are more than willing to have their information shared. We are still not doing this electronically, what is the problem?

With all of the investment in technology infrastructure, the industry has not been successful in providing the one thing that could save lives - connecting hospitals with residential aged care facilities, so that vital health records are available to the ambulance services and clinicians, when patients are at their most vulnerable.

It is a common scenario for an ACF to send a patient to hospital with a printout of their medications & current care plan, but there is no guarantee that this ever makes it into the Emergency Department (ED) clinician’s hands, or that this information relates in any way to their current trip to ED. It is also common for aged care patients to be discharged from hospital with nothing; a discharge summary is often a distant dream and usually goes to the GP & not the Residential ACF. Often this discharge summary is missing, considering many complementary medications may have been ceased during the hospital admission - the detective work begins trying to piece together what is going on with the patient’s care & where to go from here. There was a recent example of an aged care resident who was sent to hospital with hypertension and not responding to medication, the resident/patient returns two weeks later with a pacemaker and all new medications. Having had an adverse reaction to several other medications while an inpatient, the family and the Aged Care staff ask how it happened, when the patient’s reactions to medication were already known.

The only record sent with the patient is a paper record. This is in a big manila/yellow envelope, if the ACF had been organized, otherwise they are clipped notes to the blanket when the resident is collected for transport to the hospital, some pages may be missing, no one’s fault… just the problem with pages on a clip board.

If we don’t adopt sharing of information/records electronically we will continue to cause harm to the patients we intend to care for.

We know that more patients die in hospitals each year as a result of adverse events due to medications than die on our roads, yet it continues. As consumers we expect our records to be shared electronically between our GP, diagnostic providers and a hospital they refer us to, as members of the healthcare industry we know that still doesn’t happen. That is how I know we are not MAD, not at the level that we should be after all these years. As industry leaders we need to ‘Get Loud’, demand that consumers know what to expect if they happen to arrive in hospital with a trauma. “Get Loud’ talking to consumers, young consumers, let them know that their health records are not shared, see the surprise on their face. Ask consumers to demand that their records held on a server at their GP are shared electronically.

Then we will know we are truly, Making A Difference! (MAD)

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