• Vitro Software - A Digital Medical Record for Large & Small Hospitals - Enabling Intelligent Digital Transformation
    A Digital Medical Record with a difference...

    ■ Ease of use, clinician designed, minimal training
    ■ Rapid deployment, faster return on your investment
    ■ Digitise complex processes to create hospital efficiencies
    ■ Highly interoperable with existing solutions in use
    ■ Scalable to suit all organisations sizes and budgets
    ■ You own the data. Enable analytics through open access
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  • We welcome our newest client Aurora Healthcare to Vitro Software

    Australia's second-largest private mental health and rehabilitation care provider

  • The intuitive clinical data management solution for hospitals

    The simplicity of paper. The power of technology.

  • Manage your Hospitals patient data using Vitro's clinician designed system

    Improving Healthcare outcomes with user focused digital transformation

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.

IMPROVING HEALTHCARE OUTCOMES USING INTELLIGENT DIGITAL TRANSFORMATION
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%"

Vitro's Clinician Designed Digital Medical Record for Hospitals



CASE STUDIES / TESTIMONIALS

Find out how Vitro has benefited some of our clients






Top 3 Digital Healthcare Insights

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? We’re getting there!

Are We MAD? We’re getting there!

Author: Vitro Software/Tuesday, June 17, 2014/Categories: Insights

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In my last Insight I asked “Are we MAD”, by which I mean Making a Difference. In this Insight I started to look into the ‘All or Nothing’ model.

This model is offered by vendors, when responding to an eMR tender, after I attended a (National) State Health Chief Information Officer (CIO) ‘Square Table’ two years ago. Executives from the eMR, PAS and GP software vendors were seated on one side of the table, participating in a Q&A on how to collaborate and integrate to enable the PCeHR (Personally Controlled electronic Health Record) across Australia. It was a question from a CIO… ”Why can’t you vendors integrate with each other, so we don’t have to buy everything from one supplier and be locked in?” 

This isn’t how other industries work, are hospitals dealing with massive in-house IT incompetence or some other factor? I think there are two reasons.

We know there is a poor record of complex, large system installs across the world, particularly in large hospitals. Too many moving pieces and too many affected users, resulting in unnecessary technical complexity.

Analysts have tried to quantify the number of failed IT projects, usually reporting statistics that discuss failures as a percentage of the overall number of IT projects. These failure statistics are primarily useful to the extent that they illustrate that IT failure is a common and serious problem. Roger Sessions CTO of ObjectWatch defined a model that quantifies the dollar cost of IT failure worldwide (1). Roger concluded that global IT failure costs the world economy a staggering $6.2 USD trillion per year, or $500 billion each month.

The second force at work is that hospital executives have been conditioned into thinking that the only solution to support clinical computing is the deployment of a single, large system. The fallacy was pointed out by Dr. Paul Chang in a lecture at Pathology Informatics Summit 2012 (see: The Internet as the New Industrial Revolution: Implications for Healthcare). 

Bruce Friedman wrote : We have hospitals today spending hundreds of millions of dollars installing EHRs running on local servers that are the rough equivalent of "mainframe computers" in a former era. Dr. Paul Chang commented in his lecture at PI-2012 that healthcare is the only industry in the U.S. that "solves" its computer problems by using a single, monolithic, inflexible EHR system rather than a set of specialized servers connected on a network. With this more advanced computer architecture, the user submits a query to the network and the response is assembled using information from the most appropriate, specialized systems.

The irony of these systems is that these companies provide the most widely accepted EHR solution for hospital executives and they then evolve into the hospital's worst nightmare. They sell a monolithic product that only the company can install in 'some' settings, though this isn't always transparent from the start.  We all have stories of this situation, across the globe.

So, I will choose the Best of Breed and integrate it with what I need, nothing more. Also saving dollars.

(1) http://simplearchitectures.blogspot.ie/2009/09/cost-of-it-failure.html

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