Monday Morning Update 09/24/07
posted 09/23/2007
HIStalk
From
Dr. Lisa Cuddy:
"Re: Philips entering
the European HIS market. A likely target may be Agfa. No
revenue growth, no big sales, but solid installed base. There
are rumors about divesting the Agfa healthcare group and
potential bidders are GE, Philips and 3M."
From
The PACS Designer:
"Re: Oracle 11g
Advanced Compression. The subject of compression stirs a lot
of debate when discussing digital image files and what degree
of compression to use without destroying the technical
composition of the reviewed file. Oracle isn't addressing
image compression in 11g, but they are addressing compression
techniques to speed overall system performance, such as cache
memory and I/O query/retrieve from your database archive.
Oracle 11g has the capability to do table compression to more
efficiently use storage resources and, at the same time,
improve overall access time to satisfy the ever-increasing
demand for faster results from large
databases. Another new feature is to store
frequent transaction requests in cache memory so that the next
request is processed sooner by requiring less information from
the archive."
From Art Vandelay: "Re: Joel Diamond of dbMotion
interview. How is your product different from 3M's Clinical Data
Repository with configurable workstation, health data dictionary, and
alert writer?" Joel was gracious to provide a response. "First of all, let me
congratulate you for your fantastic HIStalk interview. I wanted to
respond to your ever-insightful commentary and question. While we don't
comment on specific competitors in the public domain, I would like to
answer your question in a general sense by pointing out that the
dbMotion product is unique in that it is one of the only solutions on
the market today which addresses the interoperability problem in an
end-to-end manner. Other products can provide partial solutions, such
as a centralized patient view (portal), messaging, or result
delivery. dbMotion, on the other hand, provides a complete platform
that doesn't stop there -- it goes a few steps further by enabling its
customers to maximally leverage their existing IT infrastructure to
address current and future needs. Our SOA architecture and
sole focus on interoperability allows us to address all aspects of this
complicated arena, including security, vocabularies, and semantic
knowledge. We often find that alternative solutions involve assembling
together a set of tools which are normally sold and thus often operated
independently. Even then, most companies still need to add components
from external vendors to provide necessary functionality. We also pride
ourselves in the fact that our solution is pragmatic in that it was
built to serve imperfect environments-- not just those that have ideal
interfaces and harmonization of technologies."
From Dave Unger:
"Re: Bronx-Lebanon. I
saw ECLP announced the deal. Any idea of deal size?" You
heard it here first, of course, from Inside View,
although In the Know
was wrong just a few weeks earlier when he/she called Cerner as the
winner. I haven't heard the contract size so far, but I bet I will.
From EMR Guy:
"Re: CCHIT. I heard
the 2007 CCHIT certification process was much more
difficult than previous years, and that one of the reasons why
so few vendors entered the certification process was because
it was so difficult. In other words, that many
vendors could 'get away' with promoting their
2006 certification, leaving the impression that they were
recently certified." For that or other
reason, 2007 certificants are in far fewer supply, with many
vendors still displaying 2006 stickers (or none at all). Some would say
that's what CCHIT intended - make it easy to get that first stamp of
approval, then rely on competitive pressure to move vendors up the
ladder to meet increasingly tough standards. It's interesting that
newer, smaller, cheaper vendors have already nailed the 2007 standards,
while older, larger, more expensive ones haven't. The guard is indeed
changing.
From Bud Kruger:
"Re: Quovadx. Likely
based on the Latin quo vadis, which means 'where are you
going?'" Good name for an interface engine company like
Quovadx if so, although their product name Cloverleaf is better.
From Joe Seluchi:
"Re: Eclipsys. Are
you hearing anything about Sunrise XA performance or how the early
adopters of Sunrise Pharmacy are doing?" I've spoken to
one Sunrise user and one Sunrise Pharmacy user (not the same hospital).
The first said they were having performance issues, but didn't
elaborate. The second seemed pretty happy with pharmacy, but also
didn't elaborate. First person reports are welcome.
From Steven McCroskey:
"Re: Rep. Murtha.
John Murtha of PA, the guy who brings home all the bacon to the
Johnstown area, including government money for HIT research through a
Conemaugh Health System spin-off, is named one of the most corrupt in
Congress by Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics Washington."
Murtha was already identified as having more earmark projects (i.e.,
wasteful pork barrel projects) for his home district than anyone else
in Congress. He moved
up from "dishonorable member" to "corrupt"
after charging across the House floor to threaten a fellow
Congressman for questioning a $23 million Murtha pet project, the
National Drug Intelligence Center, to be located in the high tech mecca
of Johnstown, PA. I knew about Conemaugh subsidiary InforMedx Group,
which was doing some kind of simple research for the DoD using grant
money (i.e., your federal tax dollars) that Murtha arranged.
One company employee, I notice, is named Murtha. Probably a
coincidence.
From D. C. Simonton:
"Re: Epic. Epic
reported at their annual conference that they're planning to
move to a web-based client from their current Windows/Citrix approach.
They claim it will take them 5-7 years to complete the transition!"
Appreciated, unverified, confirmation welcome.
From Ted Striker:
"Re: QuadraMed. San
Bernardino layoffs rumored - several project managers, developers,
customer support people, managers, and a director."
Unverified.
Want to help kick some crippling disease ass? Click
here and watch the four-minute "Augie's Quest" video on ALS.
For your time, Allscripts CEO Glen Tullman will donate $1 to ALS
research, along with another donor who will do the same. Your four
minutes thus contributes $2, each and every time you watch the video.
Pass it on - it's Glen's money going toward a good cause.
I got a fun e-mail from Danny Sands of Cisco after our interview. I'd
told him that, based on the experience of others I've interviewed, he'd
hear from lots of folks quickly, and likely some who had been out of
touch for awhile. He e-mailed today: "I was on the road and
finally had time to read the interview. Thanks. Based on
e-mails I received, I am impressed with how many read HIStalk. Someone
I hadn’t seen in years happen to run into my mother and told
her about it!" That's cool. Made my day.
I haven't recently mentioned my weekly editorials for Inside Healthcare
Computing, a long-time HIStalk sponsor and, as I've said
before, the only HIT (or IT, for that matter) publication that I've
ever paid to receive. Good news, opinion, and fact-finding. The only
place I know of that you can get a detailed description (pricing and
terms) of what hospitals paid for Cerner, McKesson, Eclipsys, etc.,
nimbly pried from reluctant fingers using state and federal
open records laws for journalists. Anyway, what I've opined recently on
their platform:
- Healthcare Software: No,
You May NOT Have It Your Way
- The HIT
“Trendulum” Starts its Swing Back to Administrative
Systems
- Private
Investors Will Create Competitive Newcomers
- Google
Health: Does Anyone Still Care?
Several
folks responded to the "Judy in a wedding dress and mock ceremony with
new customers" rumor. Fact: the Wedding March is
played over Epic's PA system when someone signs. That's
it. The point missed by those who e-mailed me to decry this as
a ridiculous rumor: Epic's so quirky that non-employees didn't
bat an eyelash at the idea. That's the trouble with eccentricity - it
isn't always selective. (Say, maybe I just coined a new GE
product name - Eccentricity. Or, what you could call a
deinstall: Ex-Centricity). And as one reader offers, "Epic sees
customer relationships as marriages. But, as Phillips found
out, Epic is usually pretty good at writing pre-nups
as well."
A couple of new Picis deals: Mercy Medical Center of Baltimore chooses
perioperative automation and Kennedy Memorial (NJ) goes with ED
PulseCheck.
Killer IPO: athenahealth. Shares were
priced at $18 (above the expected $14-16 range), but demand
pushed the IPO-price to over $35, a quick double and the best first-day
gain of 2007. Great news, unless you were an insider and noticed that
your big-name underwriters obviously set the open too low and let early
buyers take the profits. In their defense, the company is losing money
with $80 million in revenue, so maybe the unexpected share demand was
irrational. Jonathan Bush has $25 million worth.
Cerner co-founder Cliff Illig on entrepreneurship: "Impatience is a virtue. Have
a constant sense of urgency." The article
included a tidbit I didn't know: the founders renamed the original
Paterson, Gorup, Illig and Associates to Cerner, which they took from
the Latin cernere,
meaning 'to sift or understand'. Cliff again: "We had a list of things we
knew something about, a list of things we didn’t know
anything about. One of the things we didn’t know anything
about was health care.” And this statement,
which some would say still reflects reality: "And to us it always seemed
like if you were going to start something you needed to go sell
something. So very early on, we went and sold a lab system that
didn’t exist.” Good article, good
thoughts.
Seton Family Hospitals (TX) outsources
infrastructure management to Dell. Seems odd, although cynics might
point out that one of Seton's hospitals is Dell Children's Medical
Center, named for the Michael & Susan Dell Foundation that paid
for it. Probably a coincidence.
Here's the press
release announcing the November 5-6 conference I mentioned in
a text ad to your right. An executive-level HIStalk reader has already
let me know he'll be attending, so I hope to get a report. The speaker
lineup is "sick" (I heard that word used by a college student at a
football game this weekend and it apparently has a superbly positive
connotation, so I'll throw it out there as a hip nod to young
readers not likely to be attending a C-level conference like this
anyway). HIStalk is a media sponsor (we swap ads, in other
words). I wouldn't have done it if the agenda wasn't strong.
I tried to get an update from Kim Pederson after Allina's Davies win,
but the e-mail address I have isn't working. A couple of readers asked
what she was doing now, but it looks like I won't be finding out after
all.
Welcome to new HIStalk Gold Sponsor Premise
of Farmington, CT. The company's products deal with the urgent hospital
issues of patient throughput and business analytics. Products: Bed
Management Dashboard, BedXPress Dashboard, Transport Dashboard,
Executive Dashboard, and Asset Management Dashhboard. Great case
studies and testimonials are on the site. I mentioned a couple of weeks
ago that the company doubled its customer base in the last year and had
a 100% "would buy again" customer ranking from KLAS. I'm really
interested in products like these (having worked on a throughput
project in the past), so I hope to interview CEO Eric Rosow about best
practices. I don't know of any hospital that doesn't have all these
problems. Welcome and thanks to Premise for supporting HIStalk and its
readers.
Epic's user group meeting is over. Report, anyone? A Judy quote
to users on the $150 million Phase I campus cost: "We try to be extremely
careful with your money. (But) sometimes, it's counter intuitive
[because of private office productivity gains] ... In five years, the
buildings are paid for. The buildings, parking, artwork, everything. In
five years, we're rent-free." Also mentioned: a PHR
project code named Lucy, Epic's first international customer in
Netherlands (home of Philips), and the company's 2006 revenue of $370
million.
Speaking of Epic, Fletcher Allen Health Care wants
to spend $57 million on Epic. Ironic: IDX founder
Rich Tarrant is a big wheel there, although he's downplayed his
influence after some of its management went to jail over lying to
regulators about construction costs.
Misys says
revenue was up, although healthcare's only mention is to once again
label it as underperforming and losing ground with a 2% drop in revenue.
For the ten people who still care, Leapfrog announces
its CPOE-centric top hospitals. Even Leapfrog says only 10% have
implemented CPOE, which is a testament to its lack of clout. If the
CPOE pioneers weren't coming back with arrows in their backs, Leapfrog
wouldn't have to arm-twist.
MedAvant will
provide claims connectivity with Aetna.
Siemens gets
a Soarian sale in Germany.
The federal government awards
$4 billion in CMS IT contracts to the same vendors it always chooses,
although none them are in Johnstown, PA.
E-mail me.
Inga's Update
Skeptic
posted a note that was critical of the many excesses at HIMSS.
Skeptic’s opinion was that all those big costs ultimately
damage healthcare. “It’s never made sense to
me,” Skeptic says.
While I agree that there may be too many wasted dollars being spent at
HIMSS (and other shows), I am not convinced it is all money wasted
(though it goes without saying that a far better use of a
company’s marketing dollar would to be an HIStalk sponsor,
but I digress ...) Here are some reasons I believe a vendor can justify
an “investment” in HIMSS sponsorships, exhibits,
and the rest:
- The least expensive booth is
$2,700. Last year over 24,000 folks attended HIMSS. There are many,
many smaller shows out there that charge a similar amount and have only
a few hundred attendees. Less than $9 a body is pretty cheap. (Yes, I
do realize there are additional costs above the booth rental.)
- The exhibit fees subsidize the cost of the conference. The
attendance fees are already high – how much higher would fees
be without the sponsorships? If the fees were significantly higher,
would attendance be affected? I think so.
- Last year there were over 900 vendors. Sometimes it takes
more than free pens to differentiate yourself from the pack and attract
people your way. Is it necessary to host big extravagant parties?
Perhaps not necessary, but it can make some sense when you have so many
clients and prospects all in one place at one time with
nothing better to do than go back to a hotel room and order room
service.
I suppose an argument could be
made that there should be rules restricting vendors from giving away
any items worth more than $5 and not allowing complimentary espresso or
cocktails (sounds boring). And, maybe it doesn’t all have to
“make sense.” If some people have moral objections
to the excesses of some vendors, it is their right not to do
business with them. I think generally people are smart enough not to be
swayed by big marketing dollars when it comes down to making the most
important business decisions. If the vendors want to spend big money,
then all the more fun for the masses. (I just want to make sure I get
an invite to some of the really good parties).
A reader forwarded me a note about a new website being launched, www.medziva.com.
It’s still in its early stages, but it appears it will be a
site where consumers can inquire about particular labs and lab tests.
In terms of addressing the growing trends of consumer-driven healthcare
I think the concept is good. I suppose sites such as WebMD provide
information about different types of tests or recommended tests for
particular diagnoses, but, this site will also allow discussion of the
benefits of the labs themselves. Will this be a trend we see more of?
eClinicalWorks has
opened a new office in the Big Apple. In April, eCW signed a
$19.8 million deal with the NYC Department of Health and Mental Hygiene
to provide EMR/PM to 1,300 physicians. eCW will have about 30 employees
initially in the new facilities in order to better manage the NYC
project.
ACS announces
the promotion of Kevin Kyser to CFO. Kyser had previously served as the
VP of Finance. He replaces John Rexford, who will remain an Executive
VP over key corporate development initiatives, including mergers and
acquisitions.
E-mail Inga.