HIStalk
From
Neal's Pizza Guy:
"Re: Cerner. 21 June
2005: Cerner wins a seven-hospital Abu Dhabi contract and
no doubt promises the world. Arab pizza futures soar on the
news. 14 June 2007: Cerner opens a new office in Dubai to
supplement efforts in Abu Dhabi. The smile on Doug Krebs face
says the parking lot is full and the pizza is yummy. The other
Cernerbots smile pretty for Neal. 22 January 2008:
Doh! What do you mean we had to
deliver?!? IBA Health boots Cerner from Abu Dhabi
hospital after 'lengthy delays.' Abu Dhabi pizza futures are
down ...way down. No word on whether Krebs is still
smiling. Also: Computer Weekly reports that Fujitsu is ready to pull
the plug on NPfIT program. UK pizza futures are rocketing on the news."
Link.
From
Rich Davis:
"Re: Cerner layoffs.
Go back and check your lists of healthcare IT employers in KC. There
are several pharmacy tech vendors of size and lots of other niche
players. Other IT only places are Garmin, Yellow Freight, etc.
Don’t cry too hard for these folks. If they have any skills
at all they will easily find work."
From
Kenny Crawdad:
"Re: Keane. What is
up with Keane? I hear they are imploding because of the new
acquisition and the loss of CHS business. No real new sales in
over six months, and the only thing going is some offshoot
deals with MedSphere. Sounds pretty scary."
Unverified, assumed inaccurate unless someone wants to confirm.
A sponsor tells me (via Inga) that HIStalk was mentioned in a recent
HIMSS Analytics webinar, with 13% of surveyed healthcare CIOs saying
they read here regularly. I'm a glass-half-empty kind of guy, so I'm
thinking that having 87% who don't is a terrible disappointment, but I
guess that's pretty good.
My
editorial
this week:
Cerner
Layoffs in Review: Why Marching People Out Makes Sense, but Sickouts
Don't. A short teaser: "Personally, I’m blaming
Meditech." Want to guess the connection?
Houskeeping issues: the search box to your right plows through millions
(literally) of words of HIStalk going back to 2003, so Google yourself
or a company for fun. That Rumor Report button to your right lets you
send me anonymous, secure messages (including attachments if you're so
inclined), so give me some good dirt and I can write about. Sign up for
e-mail updates when I write something new here or for the Brev+IT
weekly e-mail. Try
HIStalk
Discussion or the
stock
page. Our friends at Healthcare IT Transition Group have a
text ad to your right for their
2008
Health IT Grant Resource Directory (you can check out sample
pages and full details). And please take a moment to do a little
click-visiting to the sponsors whose ads grace the left margin and
thereby keep my keyboard clacking until all hours of the night like
Design
Clinicals (
HIStech
Report coming soon),
SCI Solutions
(ditto), high availability architecture gurus
Stratus
Technologies (ditto again), and patient flow experts
Premise.
Speaking of Google search, I was scouring HIStalk for something
yesterday and ran across
this post
from May 2006, when
Electronic
Slide laid on some heavily sarcastic criticism of my
skepticism about the rumor that Allina was bailing out on Epic, saying
I play Epic favorites and have no journalistic standards. Since then,
Allina's live on Epic and, in fact, won the Davies Award. So there.
Jobs:
Account
Executive Sales (note: it's in KC!),
Physician
Liaison,
Information
Architect,
Sales
Executive. Signup is quick for a weekly jobs update.
Stocks started out in meltdown mode this morning, then rebounded, with
the Dow down 1% and Nasdaq down 2%. Most
HIT stocks did a
little but worse than that, but Eclipsys and Perot Systems were up.
Jim Wilson
is
promoted to president of Craneware's US subsidiary, which
sells charge master software.
Philips had a
big
Q4, doubling profits to $2 billion on a 3.8% revenue
increase, but US sales were down 10%. Healthcare is right up there with
shaving and grooming for US investment, the company president says.
King's Daughters Medical Center (KY)
names
Cathy Cooper-Weidner as VP/CIO. I think she used to be CIO at Memorial
at IU South Bend.
West Georgia Health System is
bringing
up a $12 million Meditech system. It wasn't clear what it is
from the newspaper article, but C/S 6.0 is mentioned.
If you have to make a medication error, make sure no celebrities are
involved. Dennis Quaid
criticizes
Cedars-Sinai in a Sundance Film Festival interview, something the
average patient isn't often asked to do.
Looking for a laptop deal? Best Buy has a
Gateway
with Pentium Dual Core 1.6 GHz, 2 gig memory, 160 gig SATA, DVD/CDRW,
15.4" display, and Vista Home Premium for $549. I got one and it's
sweet, even to the laptop-indifferent like me.
GE Healthcare
will
exhibit at Arab Health 2008 in Dubai next week. So will just
about everybody else in HIT, according to the
conference page.
Which reminds me: if you're an HIStalk sponsor, Inga will be contacting
you about some cool HIMSS benefits: a free sign for your booth
(autographed by her, no less!) and a mention in the upcoming "Mr.
HIStalk Goes to HIMSS" guide. Thanks to the companies who volunteered
to help out with our little giveaways there. We'll name them soon.
Siemens
will announce
the MRI winner in a live webcast Friday morning at 8:00 Eastern. Sumter
says they haven't heard anything.
The Ann Arbor Area Health Information Exchange
gets
a Detroit mention. Its annual budget is only $140K, which is darned
good. NextGen is mentioned because all the partners use it.
An embarrassing NHS
glitch:
a server crashes at midnight, the primary on-call tech forgot to turn
his cell phone on, and the backup support tech didn't have a data
center key. The ED and results inquiry function were offline for 12
hours. Maybe not as embarrassing as this NHS gaffe: a patient's newly
transplanted kidney has to be
removed
when caregivers notice that the patient's blood type was recorded wrong
in the computer.
E-mail me.
Inga's Update
The country’s oldest visiting nurse association,
VNA of Western NY
is
partnering with Cardiocom Multi-Disease Management to provide
home telemonitoring technology.
Cerner Millennium PowerChart 2007 and MEDITECH MAGIC 5.6
just
gained 2007 CCHIT EHR certification. INVISION
Clinicals Version 27.0 with Siemens Pharmacy and MAK Version 24.0 is
conditionally certified, pending a “verifiable customer
reference.”
Awarepoint and Skytron
announce
a new integrated active RFID asset management and information resource
solution.
McKesson
pats
itself on the back a bit for having 18 solutions ranked in
the top three in the recent KLAS rankings. Not shabby at all.
Greenway Medical Technologies was another strong KLAS
performer,
named
Best in KLAS for ambulatory EMR in the 6-25 physician practice.
Greenway’s also making headway into the RHIO/IDN/IPA segment
since the Stark laws were modified and has signed on 10 community
healthcare organizations since July.
Fujitsu
announces
a more secure and powerful mobile device targeted for healthcare (and
some other industries.) The newest design of the P1620 includes such
features as a biometric fingerprint sensor, secure asset tracking
software, and a weight of just 2.2 lbs.
Is it
tougher
than ever to be in healthcare sales? Out of 180,000 surveyed
docs, 19% said they refuse to see drug and device sales reps at any
time and 23% make the reps to set an appointment. However, 73% of the
physicians said they'll take details from reps at any time of the day
or week. A couple of curious observations here: first, the
numbers add up to greater than 100 (what is up with that?) and
second, this study by SK&A Healthcare Information Solutions
(who sell physician databases) claims they reached all 180,000 doctors
by phone. Why would a doctor take a phone call from a marketing company
but not see a sales rep in their office? Are there perhaps no
restrictions on paying physicians for their time to answer surveys?
E-mail Inga.
Art Vandelay on Social Networking in Healthcare
The spigot is opening. Another Web 2.0 company,
IMedix, is stepping
onto the scene to take social networking and apply it to healthcare.
This company offers a virtual gathering place for patients to share
their experience and search for useful health info.
This is one of those trends I follow from outside of our industry and
try to figure out when it will make inroads into our strategy. I have
seen small communities arise around support groups on Yahoo Groups,
FaceBook, and MySpace. These venues aren't tailored to health
information. CarePages offers a somewhat similar concept but is usually
offered through a specific health care institution. WebMD offer this
service but it can be a challenge to navigate. Revolution Health (RH)
seems to be the player with the most momentum. They offer the
communities and health info, but also aim to link in information about
physicians (typical find-a-doc search), insurance companies, and health
risk appraisals. Like RH, IMedix makes money by selling
targeted ads.
What does all this mean for us? Other than "never a dull moment", I see
four blips on the radar. First, these sites are yet another logical
platform for personal health records (PHRs). Second, they are a
platform for physician and insurer report cards. Third, we will be
monitoring content sources to provide a list of approved sources for
patients. Lastly, our media awareness requirements will evolve.
For PHRs, start brushing up on your HL7 Continuity of Care Document
(CCD) specification and quizzing your vendors. Then, start tracing the
data sources that feed the CCD. The CCD content in a PHR will be just
like a patient receiving a bill and questioning the details ("Did I see
Dr. 'A'? I don't remember her coming in.). In the PHR scenario, it will
be patients questioning diagnoses, procedural descriptions, and results
they see. Decoding the trail of consumer terminology versus
medical and billing terminology and norms will be the challenge.
For report cards and content sources, the responses of our
organizations are pretty clear. We will be asked to either try and
compile the same report card info or develop systems to align with or
challenge the scores. For content sources, we will be asked to provide
a place where our clinical content managers or librarians can add or
remove approved sites while also educating our physicians
about the sites where we usually direct patients.
Media awareness, outside of health care, is a niche service. There are
services that scour the public sources of information (ex: Internet,
publications, radio, TV) for mentions of a company and sell the
transcripts to the company. We may soon be in this challenging
situation – finding all the mentions of our organizations and
attempting to validate that what was said was correct.