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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%"

Vitro's Clinician Designed Digital Medical Record for Hospitals



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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
Open Source Software (OSS) within Healthcare IT

Open Source Software (OSS) within Healthcare IT

Dominic Green - Global Technical Sales Manager UK, Sláinte Healthcare

Author: Dominic Green/Tuesday, February 3, 2015/Categories: Insights

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National Health Service (NHS) England’s tech fund schemes had a focus on open source projects from the start. The first round (Safer Hospitals Safer Wards: Technology Fund) allocated £20m of its £260m total specifically for open source and this was rolled over into the second round (Integrated Digital Care Fund) due to time constraints. The second round also provided strong support for open source solutions, but the recent announcement that the £240m budget has been cut by £90m in order to divert funds towards solving the A&E crisis will reportedly have little effect on the number of open source projects benefitting from the tech fund. The reasoning behind this, and the advantages of open source software within healthcare, don’t always stand up to examination, however.

Open source is lower cost                                                                                   

When looking at the licensing cost of software, this is certainly true. However, looking at the total cost of ownership is more telling. In the most likely scenario, a consultancy company will be employed to implement and support the software. In the case of a full-blown, big-bang Electronic Patient Record (EPR) type system, this may be more cost-effective, but the bulk of an small to medium enterprise software purchase is not the software license – there is a far greater percentage which the company allocates towards sales, marketing, functions which the consultancy company will need to shoulder at least as much as the commercial software vendor, as the consultancy isn’t associated with the product. For example, a colleague within the NHS once directly assessed Mirth against Iguana. While the Mirth license was free, the support package in place around it made the overall cost of ownership over 5 years significantly greater than purchasing Iguana.


Open source software is more customisable

The customisability of a software package has less to do with its licensing model and more to do with its design, quality, the availability of resources and the business model around it. A piece of OSS which is badly designed with poor quality programming will cost more to customise than a commercial company will charge for the work to alter their proprietary code. Even an in-house team trying to customise a piece of OSS could struggle to compete against the customisability of the software being produced by the SMEs of today – where commercial platforms are being deliberately designed to provide hospitals with software they can customise to their exact requirements.

Open source software is more open to emerging trends

The healthcare software industry can be exceptionally slow to respond to emerging trends within software and technology – take Meditech’s user interface as a classic example. The ability of an organisation to incorporate new trends into its software is an issue which has many more factors than the licensing model, however. The size and ethos of the organisation, the maturity of the software, the language it is developed in, number of programmers working on it and, above all, the usefulness of incorporating an emerging trend all will have an effect.

Integration

A common accusation levelled at proprietary software vendors is that integration with other software is deliberately limited in order to lock clients into a closed system. While this can be true, there are again other factors which come into play – chiefly, the vendor’s strategy. Large software companies who provide packages for all specialties may be able to use an unwillingness to integrate as a tool to beat clients kicking and screaming towards further investments with them, but by providing multiple methods of interacting with a piece of software, a vendor provides potential clients with fewer barriers against buying their products.

Speed of reaction to bugs

 Source projects may have many people working on their code, bugs may be fixed quickly, but smaller projects will have far fewer people working on them, the programmers have little to lose by not responding within a set period of time and the quality of the code produced isn’t guaranteed. Conversely, a commercial organisation working within the bounds of an service level agreement is contractually bound to fix bugs within a given timeframe and a failure to meet those terms is bad for business.

Summary

Many of the arguments in favour of open source software over its commercial counterparts are far more complicated than paid vs free. The license cost of open source software may save a hospital money in the short term, but the benefits of choosing innovative software from the right company can counterbalance the short term gains and leave a client far better off in the long run

LinkedIn: http://uk.linkedin.com/pub/dominic-green/10/222/aa0

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