HIStalk
From
Captain Oveur:
"Re:
Epic. The company has a new Flight Plan model with pre-built
systems and Flight Teams for each module. Epic sells the
Flight Plan package, then a project manager develops the plan for
the Flight Team to tweak the standard product. The goal is to
reduce implementation cost and pull in the consulting business from
Epic's partners. It's hush hush, but six healthcare systems are signed
up so far." Just a
rumor until someone substantiates it, of course.
From Searching for Truth:
"Re: Soarian. For
those with Soarian implementation experience, what problems have you
encountered and how could they have been avoided? And are they selling
or not, given that one post claimed zero sales, yet another said
Siemens couldn't keep up with implementation demand?" A reader suggested either Inga
or I interview the Malvern people and give our read on the situation.
I'm willing if they are.
From
The PACS Designer:
"Re: Windows. The
mention of using Microsoft Windows in healthcare can raise the
discussion level to intense when it comes those who are for or against
such use amongst practitioners. TPD has noticed that the Windows
platform is showing up in more and more software platforms.
Even Apple has acknowledged the trend by allowing Windows to run on
Macs, and back in the late 1990s, TPD designed the first Windows-based
PACS for Cardiology! Since the move to more Windows-based
applications has accelerated, you can expect to see many more vendors
offering Windows based solutions coupled with a dedicated Web browser
to enhance the chances for user acceptance. Oracle also has noticed
this trend and has an article about it in their May/June
2007 magazine."
From
Big Daddy:
"Re: Very Rural CIO.
Thanks for the wonderful HMS ad. You should send HMS an
invoice for the free advertising. One must remember that one experience
does not reflect the experience of many. HIStalk needs to be careful
about becoming an advertising venue for vendors." I
couldn't decide on whether to post it or not. It seemed thoughtfully
written, but I'm always skeptical of all-positive reviews claiming to
be from users. I would invite anyone (including Very Rural CIO, from
whom verification would be nice) to submit HMS user reports under a
verifiable hospital e-mail address (for my information only) and I'll
run them anonymously.
From
Anonymous:
"Re: Greensburg,
Kansas hospital. Remembering how generous your readers were for Sumter
Regional Hospital, I just wanted to start the same idea for the Kansas
hospital. I know you can't turn into UNICEF, but let's think about this
one. It's much smaller than Sumter. I'll see what I can find out about
it." I've not been able to find much of anything about
Kiowa County Memorial Hospital, but KHA's news release
implies that it was
destroyed. Another says it partially collapsed, trapping 30 people
inside before they were rescued.
Speaking of Sumter Regional, I got an update from them this week.
They're hoping to open a temporary, hard-walled hospital by
mid-September. They're still working with their insurance company on
payment for the damaged or destroyed hospital, but it works like a car:
the company writes a check to bring it back to original condition, but
you decide whether to repair or replace (and Sumter hasn't decided
which to do yet.) Area hospitals are sharing Sumter's nurses to keep
them working, I noticed.
I have an intercepted e-mail -- apparently genuine,
but I'd like verification -- claiming that an Indianapolis-area
hospital is shutting down its clinical documentation
implementation due to system performance problems. If you can confirm
or deny,
let me know.
I've asked Inga to chase the story down since I have names.
Inga ran across information
about a lawsuit brought against eClinicalWorks by Houston
Physicians Medical
Association, PLLC. The medical group claimed system performance
problems forced it to stop its eCW implementation. They
sought $155K for their purchase price and $500K for lost
revenue. eCW countersued, it appears, the whole thing was
settled in April, and the medical group has moved on to Centricity
(happily, the suit claims.)
The text ads to your right are getting some decent click action, so if
you want to run a short, sweet message that will reach about 13,000
HIStalk visitors a week for a ridiculously low $100,
just let me know.
If the page views and clicks keep increasing, I guarantee that price is
going up.
A Cerner associate is
named to the Kansas City Chiefs Cheer Squad (scroll down for
the picture I know you want to see.) “With my particular
job, there is a lot more flexibility,” Jessica said.
“I’m sure as time goes on, there probably will be
some conflicts, but as long as I get my stuff done, they are flexible
with how that works.” Doesn't
say what kind of "stuff" Jessica does there.
Vital Images announces
Q1 numbers: revenue up 32%, EPS $0.14 vs. $0.10.
McKesson licenses
the Anesthesia Information Management System from DocuSys. Shockingly,
nothing was mentioned about calling it Horizon, although I have no
doubt that's already underway.
Former McKesson sales guy Matt Marshall moves
on to chemotherapy testing company Precision Therapeutics.
Judy Faulkner not only speaks at a Wisconsin conference, she gets her picture
in the paper. Not quite Howard Hughes, but a Judy sighting is always
newsworthy.
St. Luke's CIO John Wade says
healthcare will bankrupt the country without IT adoption. His
employer's flagship hospital made $38 million in profit last year, I
notice. Maybe their IT spending has cut costs the point that they can't
help it.
Inga mentions a Misys press
release below, but I'll chime in on its title alone: "The
Momentum Continues: Misys Healthcare Systems Signs More than 60
Contracts in First Quarter of 2007." Now we all know that press
releases are carefully crafted marketing messages that often have
little resemblance to what you might call "news," but isn't that "The
Momentum Continues" part just a bit over the top? Should we readers be
allowed to draw our own conclusions? I stopped reading after the
headline because it was clearly company chest-puffing. Plus, it only
says they signed 60 contracts, not that they got 60 new sales to new
customers. It's good news, just a bad press release that they certainly
don't need, given ongoing problems.
It's good to be a Googler: one of their former software engineers is a
"generous philanthropist" who pledges
$1 million for a new bus route.
Verizon will
give its employees WebMD's personal health record. Is anyone
studying anticipated vs. actual cost savings from all these modest
"free PHR" projects? Shouldn't they?
Doctors are being
jerks because of the implementation of electronic medical
records. Sometimes they're even being shipped off to expensive
residential treatment centers to calm them down. Guess you won't see
that in the vendor or hospital brochures. Maybe someday the sacred cow
of how medical students are selected, controlled, and trained will be
addressed since that's where most of the problem originates. That's
just my opinion.
A newspaper group study says the VA is
exaggerating
its record by comparing unrelated surveys, citing
supposedly impartial studies led by VA-employed authors, and
misinterpreting data.
Former Medical Manager and Hare Krishna Temple founder Mickey Singer donates
$100,000 to the Alachua, FL police department for a new computer
system. I don't know what happened to his fraud
charges.
Several employees of Tri-City Hospital (CA) are
fired after secretly taking pictures of patients and their
medical records using cell phones. Five nurses, three
secretaries, and two techs were canned.
Boston Business Journal names
athenahealth as one of the best places to work in Massachusetts.
News, rumors,
sonnets:
e-mail me.
Inga's
Update
Misys announces
60 new Q1 contracts. Appears the wins were across multiple
product lines, including solutions for hospitals, homecare, physicians,
and communities. Good to hear that it is not all doom and gloom at
Misys.
HIMSS releases
(warning: PDF) the results of their 2007 CIO survey. The top
IT priorities over the next two years are reducing medical errors and
improving patient safety (54%), upgrading inpatient clinical
systems (48%), and implementing EMRs (48%). Not surprisingly,
respondents cited lack of financial support as the most significant
barrier to implementing technology. A sign RHIO adoption still
has a ways to go: 55% of the CIOs had no plans to participate in a RHIO
(or were unaware of what a RHIO is!)
InterComponentWare AG (ICW) and Agfa Healthcare announce
a collaboration aimed at facilitating the sharing of patient data.
A ComputerWorld article
talks about vendors using blogs to communicate marketing
messages, gain feedback on offerings, etc. The writer raises a concern
that vendors may come to abuse blogs and post information that is
biased. Vendors wouldn’t do that, would they?
So, who would have thought Mr. HIStalk was such a huge haiku fan? He
actually has them plastered with sticky notes all along his
21” flat panel monitor. Because I always I live for his
admiration and praise, and, in honor of my one-month anniversary as an
official HIStalk employee, I composed a haiku of my own in his honor:
HIT Blogger
He dissects truth from rumors
Always a good read