Posts Tagged ‘improving health care’

You might need RFID; IF…

Thursday, May 27th, 2010

 

·         If you’re looking in each and every corner of your facility to find critical equipment…you might need RFID!

 

·         If 40% of a full-time employee’s work week is spent looking for equipment that needs to be PM’d…you might need RFID!

 

 

·         If you’re interested in an RFID solution to simply track your LEASED equipment since that is getting lost too…you might need RFID!

 

·         If you answer the question of “how many infusion pumps do you own” with “I don’t know”…you might need RFID!

 

 

·         If you state you have no budget, but are losing thousands of dollars per month in lost/misplaced assets and equipment…you might need RFID!

 

·         If you’ve ever found hospital equipment in a storage closet’s drop ceiling…you might need RFID!

 

 

·         If some of your patients think a wheelchair at discharge is something they can take home with them…you might need RFID!

 

·         If your telemetry units are spending a good share of time in the laundry and coming back clean but ruined…you might need RFID!

 

 

·         If you truly want to achieve greater results throughout your facility, with a system that provides instant ROI…you might need Dynamic RFID!

 

With all humor set aside, these are actual responses that we have heard from several hospital personnel.

 

 

While the Government reforms insurance rates, hospitals reform HIT to lower health care costs

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010

In the last few days there has been a lot of talk in the health care industry surrounding President Obama’s most recent health care proposal.  The year-long effort, and the fourth proposal, is focused on making health care more affordable, making health insurers more accountable, expanding healthcare coverage to all Americans and making the health system sustainable. A large portion of the proposal focuses on reforming health care insurance—designed to reduce the cost of healthcare for patients.  Moreover, Title III of the proposal, “Improving the Quality and Efficiency of Health Care,” includes incentivizing doctors, nurses and hospitals to improve care and reduce unnecessary errors that harm patients.

While the government focuses on roping in costs and incentives to improve patient care, what are healthcare providers doing to help meet these objectives?

Some of the most costly healthcare issues are healthcare acquired infections (HAIs). Annually, HAIs are estimated to affect more than 1.7 million patients, kill 99,000 patients, and cost between $35 billion and $45 billion. Under the new federal reimbursement policy, payment for care required as a result of HAIs will no longer be approved, making prevention urgently important to the bottom line. According to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), HAIs are a top 10 cause of death in America.

One of the simplest ways HAIs can be prevented is by medical personnel properly washing their hands. 

While Washington works on the insurance issues, health care providers are looking to health information technology (HIT), including RFID solutions, to help reduce cost, minimize risks and improve patient care now.  One of the best ways to prevent HAIs is hand-washing, and one of the easiest ways to ensure compliance is to back it with technology.

The hand-hygiene solution provided by Dynamic, built on Versus’ IR-RF technology, consists of badges, ceiling sensors and soap/sanitizer dispensers retrofitted with sensors. When a person dispenses soap or sanitizer, the sensor reads the ID badge and timestamps the occurrence.  If a badged person approaches a patient prior to handwashing, the system alerts the individual audibly. The information is stored in a database for reporting and is easily integrated with other systems.

The system effectively addresses hand-hygiene compliance by automatically capturing hand-washing data in the background, 24-7. It alerts staff on compliance in real time, allowing hospitals to prevent adverse events before they occur. The system tracks who washed their hands and when. 

Other RFID and RTLS solutions, such as patient tracking, medication tracking and lab tracking can help bring down the costs of healthcare by ensuring costly errors are not made. Let Washington worry about insurance reform and healthcare providers can focus on how to reduce costs, minimize risks and most important, improve patient care with HIT.

Is your healthcare organization a success story?

Thursday, February 11th, 2010

HIMSS and ASQ announce 16 “Stories of Success!” case studies

HIMSS and ASQ (American Society for Quality) recently announced the selection of 16 real-world and peer-reviewed case studies that have been selected as Stories of Success! Introduced in October 2009, the Stories of Success! case-study program showcases outstanding accomplishments in the adoption and use of information technology to achieve improved patient safety, quality, effectiveness and efficiency. The call for case studies highlights the fulfillment of the national priorities established by the National Priorities Partnership (NPP) and The Joint Commission’s National Patient Safety Goals (NPSG).  Is your healthcare organization a success story?

Designed to emphasize the link between improvements in healthcare quality and patient safety and health IT, HIMSS and ASQ chose those who are using IT every day and could identify how technology helps support the six priorities of the National Priorities Partnership and the Joint Commission’s national patient safety goals and priorities.

What are the everyday IT applications that are enabling these healthcare organizations to be recognized as a success story? For one organization, it’s RFID. A few weeks ago we highlighted how RFID can help healthcare providers meet the National Patient Safety Goals in our blog post, “What will JCAHO’s National Patient Safety Goals inspire you to do?” These Success Stories! further emphasize how RFID directly improves patient care by minimizing risks and reducing costs.

What RFID solution would benefit your organization the most? A systems integrator can help you identify where you can reap the most benefits and address the areas that need the most work. As featured in the RFID case study, it is important to start with a targeted area when implementing an RFID solution and identifying what the challenges are and how they can be met before rolling out system wide. Make your organization a success story with RFID!

Congressional Budget Office gets real about health IT

Monday, December 22nd, 2008

The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) says that ONLY health IT reform is capable of offering the kind of savings needed in the industry. Relative to the cost of implementation, health care IT generates the best ROI compared to other types of health care reform.

A total of 115 proposals were examined by the CBS, but most were found to be too expensive given the “modest” savings they would offer.

The New York Times:

Such a requirement could save the federal government $7 billion in the first five years and a total of $34 billion over 10 years, by reducing medical errors and avoiding unnecessary tests and procedures, the budget office said. It “would also lower health insurance premiums in the private sector,” the report said.

Read the full NYT article here for more details.

Your Voice Counts: DCC Hosts Health Care IT Discussion

Friday, December 19th, 2008

If you are having trouble viewing this page, click here. Please share with interested parties. View Media Release.

Click here to register

 
 

Mika Lofton
Marketing Communications Manager
Dynamic Computer Corporation
23400 Industrial Park Court
Farmington Hills, MI 48335
Main: 248-473-2200
Fax: 248-473-2201

Dynamic RFIDSOLUTIONS.com/Blog
Dynamic RFIDSOLUTIONS for health care

Op-Ed in Modern Healthcare

Friday, December 12th, 2008

My OP-ED “RFID would be wise investment of hospital IT budget” was selected in featured on ModernHealthcare.com on Wednesday. You can access the full version via the links below. It was also sent out as a feature in yesterday’s Modern Healthcare’s Health IT Strategist email.

Featured on frontpage of Modernhealthcare.com at http://www.modernhealthcare.com/

 

 

 

Featured in Health IT Strategist section at http://www.modernhealthcare.com/article/20081211/REG/312119989

 

 

 

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