Archive for the ‘patient’ Category

Using Twitter in hospitals

Saturday, November 14th, 2009

Nurses are an essential part of hospitals and can function as a communication lifeline to patients, doctors, and others in the facility. These days, there are lots of different tools you can use to communicate, but Twitter is an exciting one to consider, just because it holds so much potential. Read on, and you’ll learn about 101 different ways you can use Twitter in your hospital.

Twitter is a free social networking and micro-blogging service that enables its users to send and read messages known as tweets. Tweets are text-based posts of up to 140 characters displayed on the author's profile page and delivered to the author's subscribers who are known as followers. Twitter comes with a powerful search option 

Patient safety and Swiss cheese – How many layers do you have?

Saturday, April 18th, 2009

Reason's Swiss cheese model has become the dominant paradigm for analyzing medical errors and patient safety incidents. Reason has written extensively about how humans and organizations commit errors and how such incidents can be prevented once their causes are understood. In particular, he has developed what he calls the "Swiss Cheese" model of incident occurrence.

Here is what it looks like applied in one area where vulnerabilities can have dire consequences, the hospital setting:

ARDS is Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome which can result from a number of preventable circumstances. In the illustration above, each slice of cheese, starting from the right, represents an obstacle or defense to ARDS development in a patient admitted to the hospital. But the holes in the cheese slice represent something different – a latent error or system failure waiting to happen. These could be human error, equipment failure, and so on. Each of these can be handled and prevented by proper training, supervision, maintenance and so on. But when these methods break down, the likelihood of a serious event increases.

To bring the message home, try and develop a model for your operation theater. How many slices of cheese exist to help you prevent an accident, or recover from it? How big are the holes, and how often do you refine your procedures to improve the chances of not being in an accident, or surviving one?

The Operation Theater module of H.I.S can reduce such risks in patient safety. With features like

  • Pre-operative checklist.

  • Pre-define list of instruments and consumables.

  • Equipment and consumable sterilization tracking.

  • Exception handling for emergency surgery cases.

  • Surgery related anesthesia information.

The operation theater module helps you add additional layers of cheese to prevent accidents and ensure patient safety, besides saving you money and increasing process efficiency.

  • Optimal utilization of theater resources.

  • Just in time inventory savings on theater consumables.

  • Surgery scheduling for multiple theaters.

  • Scheduling based on average time for a class of surgery.

  • Measure surgeon's performance.

  • OT performance analysis (Weekly, monthly, yearly).

  • And increased accountability through integrated in patient billing.

So why wait? Increase patient safety and save money at the same time.

Hospital technology hype cycle

Thursday, February 12th, 2009

Does 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

Restructuring at a leading hospital in Kozhikode

Monday, January 19th, 2009

We were approached by the client to undertake a process revamp to the operations, as part of the overall brand building exercise, besides installing and implementing H.I.S replacing the 4th software service provider since inception.

Our team of experienced implementation specialists worked round the clock in hand holding the customer to bring about the transformation.

- Problem areas discovered in current software
  • Could not track visit and re-visit of out patients
  • No credit billing facilities (in patients / insurance)
  • No file system for tracking inpatient records
  • Lack of automated patient enquiry system
  • Lab results and bills had no checks and balances
  • No stock reports in pharmacy
  • No stock verification mechanism in the software
  • Unable to track company / supplier stock
  • Ability to edit stock as and when required
  • No expiry tracking feature
  • No consolidated reporting engine
- How we assisted the hospital in improving operations
  • Introducing best practices in hospital processes
  • Involving in hospital inventory stock taking
  • Changing hospital billing habits
  • Training operators for efficiency
  • Fine tuning admission and discharge procedures
  • Improving on inter department communications
  • Bringing accountability at cash counters
-  Benefits derived by the hospital after implementing SA-H.I.S (Phase 1)
  • Substantial improvement in department collections
  • Reduction in cost of serving the patient
  • Integration within department functions
  • Single point contact for patient
  • Improvement in hospital cash flow
  • Lowered hospital inventory
  • Improved patient satisfaction
The hospital is equipped with the latest IBM server running Windows 2003 and 20 Windows Vista workstations.

Management information for hospitals

Friday, January 2nd, 2009

The Decision Support System module for H.I.S has been previewed among a few clients. It is a breath of fresh air – completely new perspective of your hospital as it provides near realtime information on important parameters for management to think lateral – people, processes, patients, doctors, departments, services and suppliers – all tied up to financial information to assist you take critical informed decisions that would attract more patients, drive down your costs, enhance patient relationship, fine tune your medicine procurement and bring about operational efficiency.

The DSS tool is now being bundled as as a two day service by the consulting division. Significant changes observed at hospitals include

  • Reduced inventory levels by up to 35%
  • Freeing over Rs. 800,000 in inventory value.
  • Considerable reduction in patient wait time at billing points
  • Quicker patient discharges
  • Improved room utilisation
  • Introduction of performance rating parameters for front office staff

Patient satisfaction survey for hospitals

Thursday, September 18th, 2008
Some valid questions every hospital owner should ask periodically in order to assess how customers perceive the organisation
  • How satisfied was the patient when he last visited your hospital
  • Which are the parameters you think are valid attributes for patient satisfaction 
  • Which attributes do you want to believe are the right ones for mapping satisfaction
  • Which are the most relevant attributes for patient satisfaction
Our team of engineers have developed a module that allows hospitals to measure customer satisfaction based on what your patient thinks are the right attributes for a pleasant experience. We used the internationally recognised methodology known as servqual for service satisfaction
 
The patient satisfaction survey is available as a product and service for all existing customers of SA-HIS
 

Hospital as a performing theatre

Friday, August 8th, 2008

The 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

Statistics for hospitals

Monday, June 9th, 2008

We are building a module for Hospital Statistics which would provide detailed information similar to the ones from spss.

Patient demographics
Patient spending patterns
Days spent in hospital
Patient visit frequency
Cross consultations
Disease information
Doctor recommendation patterns
Drugs inventory
Hospital profitability analysis

More information to follow..

Hospital – fingerprint recognition and barcoding

Tuesday, May 6th, 2008

Bar coding helps easy movement and tracking of patient records, assets and theatre consumables within the organisation. Our HIS reporting system has an easy to implement barcode printing system.

Finger print recognition equipment can be connected for personnel identification and attendance monitoring systems.