• 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
    REGISTER FOR A LIVE DEMO WATCH VIDEO
  • 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."


Read the Insight in full


 

“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"


Read the Insight in full


 

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..."


Read the Insight in full


 

CONTACT VITRO SOFTWARE

Find out more about how clinical data management software & electronic medical records can change your organisation

Contact Vitro Software >>

VITRO SOFTWARE NEWS

Hear about Vitro Software's latest company and healthcare news

 

Vitro Software News >>

READ OUR eHEALTH INSIGHTS

Read our latest industry Insights for hospitals and healthcare providers...

 

Vitro Software Insights >>


Vitro News
Health Band-Aid

Health Band-Aid

A national electronic record has been so slow in coming, the private service providers are stepping up with their own systems, writes Tim Binsted.

Author: Vitro Software Host/Tuesday, April 5, 2016/Categories: News, Australia & Asia-Pacific, In the News

Rate this article:
No rating

Originally Printed in the Australian Financial Review:

How's this for a truly awful example of everything that's wrong with the health system: Patient A is a 57-yearold customer of health insurer nib. She had 19 hospital admissions over a two-year period, costing nib in excess of $85,000, "due to her multiple chronic ailments, lack of care co-ordination of her healthcare needs and siloed communication across primary care, hospitals and specialists involved in her care," according to the insurer.

Mrs A, who had a history of pulmonary hypertension, diabetes, back pain and many other chronic diseases, is the archetype of the high-care patient at the centre of the Turnbull government's big new plans for primary health care in this country.

Only on Thursday Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull and Health Minister Sussan Ley said care for the chronically ill will be overhauled under a new system of Health Care Homes, in which electronic records will be a key component.

Australians with high-care needs see up to five different GPs a year. About 20 per cent of the population live with two or more chronic diseases, and half of all avoidable hospital admissions in 2013-14 were due to chronic conditions.

"There is still far too much evidence of overservicing, overcharging and avoidable treatment," nib managing director Mark Fitzgibbon says.

At the centre of this debate is a concern that the Federal government's much vaunted national My Health Record has failed to reach most Australians. Since it was launched in 2012, 2.5 million people have signed up, vastly less than is needed to make the system a truly national record.

In frustration private health providers are creating their own systems. While this is helping lift the number of people with easily accessed data, there are risks that the process will ultimately lead to a fractured national record.

"I think [the private health insurance] industry is making good progress on this front, but there is much to be done. At nib we're especially interested in helping people make better decisions around their treatment options and choice of health-care provider through initiatives such as TripAdvisor style [website] Whitecoat," Fitzgibbon says.

New Medibank chief executive Craig Drummond said this week that the nation's soaring medical costs, which have pushed premiums up by 5 to 6 per cent a year for the last decade, are unsustainable.

Leading up to Friday's Council of Australian Governments meeting, South Australian Premier Jay Weatherill dismissed $5 billion of extra federal funding for state hospitals as "a Band-Aid on a much bigger wound."

One of the most egregious shortcomings is the failure to share and collect patient information. This syndrome, with its endless anecdotes of repeat orders for unnecessary tests and scans, and wasted medicines, has become a symbol of the waste and inefficiency endemic in the health system.

"We can't co-ordinate before we're connected," Calvary Health Care chief executive Mark Doran says.

"Ambulances don't talk to New South Wales Health, hi the ER [emergency room] they ring on the phone to tell you something is coming and they write it down on a piece of paper. It is crazy. Why wouldn't the ambulance be transmitting data to the hospital?"

Despite past failures, billions of taxpayer dollars are once more being thrown at e-health initiatives including a fresh $485 million injection into the federal My Health Record program.

But health-care providers like Calvary aren't waiting for the government to fix things. In fact the one-size-fits-all approach of government programs is arguably the very thing that damns them.

"We are great supporters of the My Health Record, the government system, but we see it as just a repository. We see a need for a live document that can dynamically portray where this person is on their journey," Doran says.

"GPs say they will use the system but what you've [government] given us isn't intuitive. It needs to be designed by the people who do the work."

John Sutherland, the chief information officer of Australia's biggest private hospital operator Ramsay Healthcare, agrees that the "top down" approach is flawed.

He says that the genesis of Ramsay's new MyPatient+ app - a real time mobile app that allows doctors to access patient information - came from doctors.

"Doctors have been fully engaged throughout the process. This is a business tool for them. It is making it easier for them, easier for Ramsay, and making it more convenient for the patient," he says.

"The mobile [app] is being rolled out nationally across all of our hospitals. This was very quick and put in place within a couple of months. Uptake is terrific." The contrast with government programs is stark.

Despite more than $1 billion in cumulative funding, just over 8000 health-care providers and 2.6 million patients - a little more than 10 per cent of the population - have registered with My Health Record.

Last month a group of rural GPs in South Australia wrote to SA Health chief executive David Swan criticising the state's $422 million Electronic Patient Administration System and asking for it to be overhauled or replaced.

The Grattan Institute's Dr Stephen Duckett says Australia's pursuit of e-health "has been a tragedy". "We are way behind other countries, such as Denmark, and we have started off in so many of the wrong places to the extent that the then-Labor government conceptualised success not in terms of meaningful use, but in terms of how many people signed up," he says.

While governments tinker and try to push systems on to doctors and patients, healthcare providers are finding solutions based on the needs of patients and clinicians. 

 Calvary Health Care Nusing Staff using Vitro EMR

Calvary, a Catholic non-profit operator of 15 public and private hospitals, 15 retirement and aged-care facilities and 22 community care centres, has been rolling out its Vitro digital records and patient chart system following a successful trial last year at its 60-bed Bethlehem hospital in Melbourne.

Belinda Mcrae, the nurse unit manager on the St Teresa's ward at Bethlehem, says that despite initial "teething problems" it's been a success. "We were the pilot of MedChart, the online medication chart It has made a huge difference for being able to read medication orders and keeping track of doses. The reduction in incidence of missed medication is amazing," she says.

"From a workflow point of view, being able to access the same record at the same time [as other staff] is huge... I don't think we could go back."

It only takes about 10 minutes to teach new staff to use the system, and Mcrae says the Vitro record, which can digitally replicate the look and feel of paper, makes it easier to track shifts and pick up issues, such as missed or overdue medications.

However, Bethlehem's records do not communicate directly with other parts of the wider health system, such as General Practitioners, with chart print outs a throwback to the old ways.

This raises questions about the ability of separately developed systems to communicate and integrate. Could the current fracturing of medical information become entrenched as providers develop their own systems - albeit out of frustration with government record keeping programs.

Duckett says we must be careful not to create the health equivalent of "a new railway system with different gauges".

To illustrate the problem, NSW Health keeps electronic records, paper records, digitally scanned paper records, and databases developed by Local Health Districts.

The Baird government is spending $400 million over five years to fund its e-health strategy and is building 11 locally based electronic medical record systems and the statewide HealtheNet system.

The Turnbull government's new vision for chronic care also envisages a bigger role for private health insurers, who as a payer of medical bills are well incentivised to lower costs.

Medibank has been running pilots involving 3000 patients and 500 GPs with the governments of Victoria, Western Australia, and Queensland for its chronic care program, called CareComplete.

Nib has its own care co-ordination programs, which the insurer says have saved Mrs A from about six unnecessary hospitalisations, savings in excess of $22,000. The patient has also seen her extended family for the first time in two years.

In Newcastle Calvary is playing a key role in the My Netcare project to improve outcomes and care, and lower costs, for patients in their last year of life or suffering chronic disease such as diabetes.

More than 70 per cent of people want to spend their final year at home, but less than 20 per cent achieve this goal.

Patients can log into My Netcare, a cloudbased app product, from home and update information such as their pain on any given day. Family members with access can also use the records to help manage care. This should take away some of the anxiety family carers feel for vulnerable loved ones.

Critically, My Netcare medical files can be sent by secure message to GP software systems and hospital systems.

With government trials of the new medical home model of primary care to kick off from July next, an acid test looms for the integration of different data systems, and whether patients like Mrs A will stop falling through the gaps.

The government's national My Health Record has failed to reach most Australians.

Australian Financial Review Website: www.afr.com
Print

Number of views (7621)/Comments (0)

Please login or register to post comments.

Theme picker