HIStalk
From
zzsiemensemployee:
"Re: FDBE signs
up with Map
of Medicine and Soarian." That's First DataBank Europe,
which will provide clinical decision support content to Siemens in
Europe just like their US operation does here. I hadn't heard of Map of
Medicine, now owned by Informa - it's an evidence-based medicine
tool
that looks pretty cool, actually.
From
zzzsiemens: "Re: Soarian. Soarian didn't
have zero sales in 2006 because salespeople are in Malvern instead of
hitting the road. It's because the poor sales guys have nothing to
sell. Just ask them to show you working code in a real hospital
environment instead of slideware, then come back and give your readers
your unbiased impression." I only know one hospital
first-hand that tried to implement Soarian and it got yanked. I'll take
that challenge, though - if you work for a hospital that is running
Soarian in production right now,
let me know.
I've heard the "slideware" stuff for years and would be
interested in some unvarnished truth myself.
From
Puget Sound EMR: "Re: Bruce Greenstein. I
noticed at HIMSS that Bruce Greenstein is listed as the Senior
Director, Worldwide Health Microsoft. Is this the same Bruce
Greenstein
who was or is VP of healthcare for CNSI in Rockville, Md? It says he
was with CMS and then GAO. Same guy, I wonder?"
From Curious: "Re: CHS. News on CHS'
acquisition of Triad seems light. Does HIStalk cater primarily to
not-for-profit healthcare?" Generally, I would say, only
because that includes most of the hospitals and the IT
news. If a story isn't directly IT-related, I'll usually leave
it to more general healthcare blogs to cover since I don't have much
value to add, so the Triad thing didn't hit my radar very hard. I have
enough problems trying to keep up with IT stuff. I need contributors
who can help me cover all the areas everyone wants covered!
From Anonymous:
"Re: EMRs. In my
area, Epic and Cerner each have a big customer and their systems won't
exchange information. What regions of the country have the largest base
of EMRs at different healthcare systems that do actually talk to one
another? At least for medication reconciliation, labs, test results,
pharma, etc." Interesting question in the RHIO era. The
floor is open.
My new pal Amy has made a few minor improvements to the HIStalk layout
that I like a lot. I asked her to highlight links underlines so they
stand out better (which I could never get to work, even in the old
format, because I'm CSS illiterate.) She even put a cool little HIStalk
logo at the beginning of each article to make it easier to separate
each posting when you're reading. I'm not sure there's much left to do,
so it's good to be back in a routine again. I know not everyone likes
the new format (some of whom didn't like the old one either) but I
think it's pretty good.
And speaking of which: I'll be expanding things shortly. A vocal
minority of readers would like me to post in more traditional blog
format, with one story per posting and reader comments tied to that
particular posting. I know most of you prefer the "everything in one
posting" format I've used from the beginning, but suddenly lightning
struck: I really could do both fairly easily, plus have a failover if
the blog service goes down for some reason. I've got a couple of
professionals working on some cool stuff. All in my plan for world
domination, of course. And I really appreciate your input from the
HIStalk
Reader Survey, which is still open and ready for your wise
counsel. I'm not even waiting for it to be finished before taking some
advice from it.
I placed a new poll to your right: are you interested in Virtual HIMSS?
I kind of am, to be honest, although I can barely pay attention at the
real thing and I really struggle when listening in on Webexes.
I need to make one mention. Someone in my survey complained that
HIStalk is not searchable. It is - the Google Search box to your upper
right defaults to searching just HIStalk and its 699 articles going
back to June 2003 (a fourth birthday is coming soon!) Also, a survey
respondent suggested dropping my $100 subscription fee, so I'm really
not sure what that was about since there isn't one. Every bit of
HIStalk is right here in the open for you to read and (hopefully)
enjoy, just like it always has been.
Thanks to everyone who has donated to Sumter Regional Hospital. I am
astounded, as usual, at the response from individuals, vendors, and
sponsors. I admit that it warms my usually cold heart to see the
support the hospital is getting here. I appreciate it. Someone asked if
Sumter is not-for-profit and that's a "yes." That made me realize that
your donations should be tax deductible. You have your HIStalk receipt,
but I've asked the hospital if they can e-mail one directly to each
donor just in case the IRS doesn't trust me.
Cerner
gets
some new UK imaging business from Atos Origin.
Parkland
implements
multi-campus VoIP networking from Avaya and Juniper Networks, giving
remote sites better communications and allowing Parkland to run a
centralized call center.
Interesting: a Mass General anesthesiologist tinkering around
with an IV pump
came
up with what became the smart pump from Alaris, which now
sells $700 million a year under Cardinal Health. But this is what
caught my eye:
"What
Sims did is called user-driven innovation by Eric von Hippel, a
professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Sloan School
of Management. Von Hippel is the leading advocate of the value of
letting users of products modify them or improve them, because they may
come up with changes that manufacturers never considered. He thinks
that this could help companies develop products more quickly and
inexpensively than with their internal design teams."
Mentioned: computer game "mods" and Firefox add-ons. Do HIT software
vendors offer chances do to that by writing open APIs, providing specs,
and encouraging user development? Seems like a different way to attack
the market. I see Dr. von Hippel's book can be downloaded from
his site,
as can some of his papers. Like John Glaser, he even wrote a bedtime
story
book
for his daughter. That and the news that Britney Spears is worth $100
million makes me feel like such a loser. Everybody's doing fun stuff.
The Utah Medical Association
will
make EMR/PM from eClinicalWorks available to its members.
A big deal for ED vendor Emergisoft: LSU
will
implement its EDIS in its eight EDs.
I hadn't heard that Texas Tech's medical school
is
implementing an ASP version of VistA, with the help of
integrator DSS, Inc. of Juno Beach, FL.
Thanks for: the Sumter donations, completing the reader survey, and of
course for reading. News, rumors, a bedtime story for me:
e-mail me.