HIStalk From Morrie Kessler: "Re: Perot Systems. On the
acquisition hunt? Any ideas of who it could be?" The
company announces that Q2 revenue was up 11%, but EPS dropped to $0.18
vs. $0.21. As part of the announcement, Perot says it will acquire a
company with $80-90 million in revenue in the next few weeks (OK, I
need to know who ... whisper it to me). They also mentioned a plan to
acquire two or three companies each year in their focus areas, with an
interest in expanding outside the US (i.e. "we need cheap offshore
labor like FCG and those other guys").
From Paul Cicero:
"Re: Kaiser. Even the
Kaiser-bashing Sac Bee pointed out that the surgeon accused of killing
the mentally retarded, dying patient for the purpose of harvesting his
organs, who actually didn’t die when they took him off life
support and gave him a stunning amount of drugs in order to ease his
assumed passage, wasn’t working as a Kaiser physician when he
was performing his service. I know you are not a Kaiser basher, so I
thought I’d point that out." Thanks. I didn't
catch that in the story. That may keep Kaiser off the inevitable
lawsuit list, although having him on staff and providing him with what
I assume is the bulk of his livelihood can't be good PR nonetheless.
From Buffy
Patterson-Davis: "Re:
Intel's Craig Barrett. You are soooo right! He has been
insufferable at the AHIC meetings that I have attended. Just
ridiculous. He seems to think that attaching a few devices to a home
health care network will solve the whole problem. I’m always
impressed at how polite the clinicians are in the crowd when he is
speaking – they never boo. I’ve heard a lot of
corporate execs talking about health care lately and the bottom line
has been a deep fury at having to spend money on the benefits. I mean,
they are livid. They try to hide it, but it just bursts out. I
sat next to the heir of a prominent company at a meeting and the
resentment was plain. They just don’t want to pay. Period.
They don’t want to pay taxes, either."
From Billy Batts: "Re: UPMC. Interesting
discussion about UPMC's environment. A couple of comments: 1) cost
savings and cost avoidance are very different. If you project sizable
costs and then avoid them, that's not the same as cost savings, which
are usually measured from your existing cost base. Much of UPMC's
public statements about costs appear to be based more on avoidance than
savings. And of course, there is somewhat of an incentive to project
future costs as high as possible so that the avoidance of those costs
looks really good. 2) Going from 40 servers at $500K down to six
servers at $6.5K defies common sense. If UPMC's engineers are really
going to 'roll out an application to additional sites' and claim to be
able to do it with a half dozen desktop machines, there is a major
disconnect somewhere. So I wouldn't necessarily bet on UPMC in this
case. 3) Holland should be more cautious in his claims. We have been
heavily virtualized with both servers and storage for several years, as
is the case with other healthcare sites. It's tiresome to keep hearing
how far behind we are. Healthcare is arguably the most complex industry
in our economy and our IT environments reflect this. Claiming that we
should have the same technology environment as much simpler industries
demonstrates a lack of appreciation for the challenges we face in our
business, and is not a reflection of 'how good we are'."
And speaking of UPMC, Inga tried, at Art Vandelay's suggestion, to
connect with UPMC to talk about virtualization. She got a curt "no" in
response to her request for an interview. We've got a few UPMC readers,
so the first words I thought of (an old, crude saying) involve people
you'd sleep with, but not bring home to meet the family. I guess we
don't have the cachet of those inexperienced kid journalists
who've never worked a day in either healthcare or IT. Maybe I should
ban UPMC's IP address from reading here.
I'll be writing and sending the first Brev+IT shortly. Consider this a
beta test, just in case I mess up the formatting or e-mailing. I see
141 subscribers so far. I may post the first issue online to encourage
(or discourage, depending on how it goes) new signups. UPDATE: First issue is here.
Subscribe to your right if interested.
Sponsor website cruise: (1) I see that Healthia
has some interesting consultant positions open for clinicals, surgery,
pharmacy, radiology, and HIM, to name a few. If your consultant
employer has chewed you up and spit you out, give them a look - they've
got a great reputation for being employee-friendly. (2) EnovateIT has
redesigned their site, I notice, and you can more easily find specific
products from a front-page product selector. (3) You probably noticed
EHRConsultant's rotating ads to your left, which now describe the
company's main offerings: the EHRscope
product guide, their Naturally
Speaking product line with 12 medical vocabularies, and the
flagship EHR
Consultant service for matching physicians with EHRs. (4) Our
friends at Pring|Pierce
Executive Search are ready to apply their industy experience
to place executive-level talent (sales, marketing, strategy) reliably,
effectively, and professionally. (5) Providers who need assistance with
strategic planning, operational assessments, patient safety, and
contract negotiation (and who doesn't) and at the right price (even
better) should give a look at MedMatica
Consulting Associates. They'll put experienced,
regional resources on the ground quickly and cost-effectively to
energize your projects and maybe keep you from getting fired
when your teams are in over their heads. (6) Last but not
least, our colleagues at The White
Stone Group can help with documenting and managing
communications, such as in denials management and caregiver hand-off
(Joint Commission, anyone?) Who couldn't use a patient-indexed
communications capture system that involves minimal IT headaches and
slam-dunk ROI? Please help HIStalk by clicking sponsor ads to your left
and checking out what they offer. They keep HIStalk coming free and I
appreciate them.
I ran across a press
release from Lucida Healthcare
Group that describes cool technology they came up
with for recruiting traveling nurses. They have trucks
carrying mobile billboards that invite sending a cell phone text
message for more information. Then, data from the GPS
systems in the trucks is merged with the incoming call records to
measure the effectiveness of each truck's route, allowing re-routing
for optimal ad response. That's almost as good a testimonial for their
savvy as their HIStalk sponsorship (shameless plug by me).
Alamance Regional (NC) chooses
SIS surgery through their Eclipsys partnership.
Any Travel, Inc. may be suing Misys for supposedly trashing its El
Dorado office buildings in Tucson, but apparently the
damage wasn't bad enough to discourage buyers. The property
has been sold
for $5.8 million to a company that will gut the buildings in turning
them into a multi-tenant complex.
A physician systems consultant criticizes
the industry in a letter to the editor of a Vermont
newspaper: "What I
saw, all too frequently, was a prime example of people in the computer
technology field taking advantage of others that have little knowledge
of the technology involved. I saw one office pay nearly $7,000 each for
computers that were worth $300 and then buy software that was more than
10 years out of date ... An electronic medical records system is just
software in which a vast amount of information is saved and
interlinked. Most modern commercial, off-the-shelf database management
software can be programmed so easily that even complex networked or
Internet-based software can be custom developed to create centralized
software applications that service a large number of geographically
dispersed offices."
Scottsdale Healthcare (AZ) is
piloting what its vendors say is the first patient room
service meal system that checks dietary restrictions and allergies.
FCG reports
lackluster Q2 numbers: flat revenue, EPS $0.12 vs $0.20. They tried
hard in the announcement to confuse readers into comparing the current
EPS with those from last quarter instead of Q2 '06, or at least it
appears to me. Shares jumped nearly 9% on the encouraging news that
profits tanked, but not as bad as everybody expected.
A California judge orders
jurors in a medical malpractice case not to see Michael Moore's Sicko, which
featured a similar case. Good advice they probably didn't need: the
movie has done only $22 million of business, although Moore's deal is
50% of the gross, so his stomach is jiggling all the way to the bank.
If it ends up doing as well as his previous movie, he'll pocket over
$100 million (plus a huge cut of DVD sales) for doing whatever it is he
does. You have to love a socialist blowhard with a populist message
who's worth more than the captains of industry he hates (and who
actually create jobs). Plus, his foundation (with minimal donations to
actual causes) has owned shares in Halliburton, defense contracting
giants, and even those carmakers he ripped in Roger and Me. He
also claimed in a previous movie that he would "hire only black
people," but not even one has crept into the credits so far. And, he
proclaims disdain for copyright laws, except when he's demanding
that people not download his own movies. "When Moore flew to London to
visit people at the BBC or promote a film, he took the Concorde and
stayed at the Ritz. But he also allegedly booked a room at a cheap
hotel down the street where he could meet with journalists and pose as
a ‘man of humble circumstances." What a gasbag.
CPSI promotes
Darrell West from controller to CFO.
I didn't realize you cared so much for Clarion Health Center (PA) It
was darned nice of you to send
$100,000 of your Federal tax dollars to them to help pay for
their EMR software.
Wisconsin hospitals are going
crane-crazy erecting new Taj Mahospitals. Bet they'll keep
those diagnostic machines cranking to cover the $1 billion
tab. In fact, a local business guy claims it's driving up healthcare
costs (duh) and that Milwaukee alone has more MRI machines than in all
of Canada. Children's Wisconsin wins the prize at a $2 million per bed
project (children's hospitals are always out of control financially
because "it's for the kids", meaning "don't dare question our budgets
or we'll drag out awww-inducing snapshots of tykes while you're
PowerPointing financial statements"). Here's my theory: non-profit guys
don't get juicy stock options, so they spend the money building
monuments to their own wonderfulness, convincing themselves it's really
for the patients or the community. The execs at places I've worked
couldn't wait to put on their honorary hard hats and run around the job
site looking important. Hint: hire more nurses (or build a cheap,
functional nursing school and graduate a lot more of them) if you want
to do the community a favor. And, if you want to get really crazy, cut
prices for the uninsured.
CareTech Solutions announces
its BoardNet product, a secure communications portal for hospital board
members.
Meditech's latest quarterly SEC filings: revenue up 11.3%, EPS $0.67
vs. $0.59.
Well, I'm embarrassed. I've never watched Mr. Ed (it seemed too stupid
even among stupid TV shows), so I didn't recognize the theme lyrics
that Scot wrote were the originals. Still, that inspired him to compose
his own, in honor of Craig Barrett and his EMR-powered horses.
A horse is a horse Of course, of course And no one can talk to a
horse of course That is of course unless
the horse Has an equine EHR.
Go right to the source
and ask the horse He'll give you the
medical history that you'll endorse He's always on a steady
course The horse has EHR!
People yakity-yak a
streak And waste your time of
day, But a horse will never
speak Unless he has something
medical to say!
A horse is a horse Of course, of course And this one will
complain about EHR privacy 'till his voice is hoarse You never heard of a
talking horse? Well listen to this: "I am a horse with EHR!"
Inga's Update
Premier Healthcare Alliance names Randy Thomas vice president of
Integrated Product Management and Marketing. She comes from IBM and,
before, that TSI and Eclipsys.
iMedica announces their customer based has increased 76% in the first
six months of 2007 as 77 new clients have purchased their EMR/PM
integrated solution. iMedica, based in Dallas, was started by several
old Millbrook employees after GE acquired Millbrook. I have heard the
iMedica product has functionality similar to GE Centricity (the old
Millbrook product) but with lots of technological bells and whistles
such as .NET.
Thanks to Bill Lynch of Axolotl, who took the time to write a note
reminding me that despite Santa Barbara’s RHIO failure, there
have been other efforts that are making good progress.
“HIEs/RHIOs have been up and running, successfully, for quite
a while. HealthBridge, Taconic/THINC, Quality Health Network
and many others have shown what can be done if you build your HIE with
committed partners, candid communications, clinician-first workflows,
and proven technology.”
A couple in Arkansas just had their 17th child. Wow. Why, why, why?
Guess it is not as odd as the lady in Mexico City who kept her dead
husband in her bedside and had her adult son remove the worms every so
often. Our little HIT world seems so ho-hum and mundane when you
compare it to such “real world” happenings.
My "Mr. Ed'd EHR" composition was meant to be humorous, but the results of
interference in health IT by those who take an attitude of technologic
determinism, and hint at or threaten economic budgeoning, are often not
very funny.