Software Associates completed 8 SA-H.I.S installations within stipulated time across South Kerala during March 2010. Providing comprehensive end user training, hands on business consulting for hospital owners, ERP Implementation and legacy data conversion for a textbook style go live on 1st April. This was orchestrate through meticulous project execution, co-ordination with teams based at Kochi, Trivandrum and Kozhikode using modern communication and collaborative tools to meet hospital expectations – backed by over 2 decades of domain expertise for small and medium size hospitals. The new clients appreciated the insights into measurable return on investment, reduction in operational costs, improvements in patient discharge processes and enhancing patient overall experience for better management control and peace of mind.
Archive for the ‘India’ Category
Hospital implementation – March 2010
Friday, April 9th, 2010Workshop on effective management of hospitals in Kerala
Tuesday, July 21st, 2009
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Hospital technology hype cycle
Thursday, February 12th, 2009Does technology really matter ?
Often we do get calls from prospective clients who buzz about technology before deciding on software products for the healthcare sector. Typical questions include
- Is your product built using eclipse or Visual Studio tool
- Does your product use X or Y rdbms
- Is your product a web based point of sale application
- Do you provide unlimited customisation
What matters
- Contribute to overall return on investment (Ask for value chart)
- Improve hospital business processes – Process chart for hospitals
- Enhance patient experience – Reduction in patient wait time
- Have low cost of ownership (TCO) (thin client for eg; lower operating power)
- Scalable to support the growth of the hospital
- Secure enough to hold your valuable data
- Transparent and ethical on the licencing aspects of the software
- Constant updates and release upgrades -
- Be affordable to hospitals in emerging nations – India
- Zero maintenance cost for software vs cut and paste programming
- Be self running as hospitals cannot afford dedicated IT departments
- The software must guarantee return on investment
Hospital as a performing theatre
Friday, August 8th, 2008The government has initiated many development plans in India targeted at Tier 2 and 3 Cities for BPO / IT services. This would mean an influx of large number of high worth professionals from the cities to these towns and a few professionals returning to their native towns as work from home is also becoming a reality. A large number of the traditional small hospitals and nursing homes are not equipped enough to handle them.
Customer value perceptions and expectations are different. Some of the services such as surgery have high credence attributes (fear of the unknown) and benchmarks are often set using alternative or best known standards. Success of services also depends on the extend of client participation. Over participation can also play a spoilsport at times.
Take a look at this scenario
- Out patient registration process was seamless
- The rooms were clean
- Toilets did not stink
- Canteen served excellent health meals
- The surgeon was brilliant
- The nurses were courteous
- The patient recovered in no time..
- Value for money all the way
- A smiling patient and relatives
The discharge paperwork processing took almost a day. Which upset everything
A hospital is like a performing arts theatre.
- The backstage comprises of accounts, stores, engineering, maintenance etc
- The actors are the doctors, surgeons, pharmacists, nurses and even the cleaner.
- The audience would comprise of patients and bystanders.
Each of the patient touch point need to be rehearsed for minimal errors and unpleasant experiences. Some of these patient touch points have high risks associated with failure. There is a need to have backup or escalation plans. The longer the wait period the higher would be the associated risks. for eg., communicating to the patient about possible delays in an outpatient like or X-ray department could help in most cases. There are exceptions.. the jaywalker would still be hard to handle.
WOM marketing is important to build customer loyalty, although it is not a measure of satisfaction. It would also mean non availability of better services in your vicinity.
Patient satisfaction survey is one way of measuring whether hospitals meet the expectations of customers. There are industry standards such as servqual to measure service satisfaction. The younger generation of patients have international exposure could be demanding and concerned about every aspect of the service being provided. Tolerance levels for some of these attributes do matter as well.
- Smelly toilet due to poor housekeeping could mean nothing to some
- Well dressed front office staff might impress many
- Rude pharmacist's behavior might be ignored
- Billing for services not used will not be tolerated
In 90% of the cases it is the last touch point which causes the maximum damage. Having well oiled and seamless information systems in place is a must for small and medium sized doctor owned hospitals to survive in emerging tier 2 /3 cities.
- Enabling seamless customer experience through simple procedures
- Measurement of performance of people and departments
- Controlling of costs in various departments
- Measurement of cost reduction in the hospital
- Empower employees for service failure recoveries
- Right pricing products and services through activity based costing
Is your hospital software eating into your profits ?
Tuesday, June 17th, 2008Low security Poor reporting No user tracking Open passwords Unfinished software Not user friendly developers closed shop Incomplete billing cycle No support Unauthorised editing Costly bugs Pilferages Lacks industry expertise Cash shortage No planning tools Stock mismatches Inaccurate billing Long discharge process Not scalable Poor design No control Never ending development
Time to move over to SA-HIS
Available in India, Middle East and Africa
Tax holiday for hospitals in tier 2 / 3 Indian cities
Sunday, March 2nd, 2008India on Friday cut excise duty on goods produced in the drug sector and extended a five-year tax holiday to hospitals set up any where in India, except in certain urban areas, boosting shares of healthcare and drug firms.
We operate in tier 2 / 3 / 4 cities in India and welcome this move from the government.
IRDA – New treatment norms
Monday, December 3rd, 2007With the increasing cost of healthcare in India, there is good news for consumers
Healthcare going green
Saturday, December 1st, 2007Did you ever think how many trees are mowed down each year to supply paper for the healthcare industry? Doctors at George Washington University Medical Faculty Associates in Washington, D.C. estimate that converting to a fully electronic medical record system is saving about 2000 pieces of paper per physician per year. Assuming that figure is correct and assuming 700,000 or so physicians practicing in the US; converting 100 percent of docs to electronic records could save 1.4 billion pieces of paper each year. According to howstuffworks an average tree yields about 80,000 sheets of paper. Therefore, if every doctor in America was fully electronic, according to the figures provided, we could save about 17,500 trees a year! And that's just from American doctors who go electronic. Imagine India and if the entire industry went that way!






