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Christina Thielst's Twitter Updates

4 Best Types of Apps for Hospital Use http://t.co/7V86MMDn 247 days ago
RT @childhealthwi: September 28 is Wisconsin's annual Bullying Awareness Day - Act Now! helps schools battle… http://t.co/oF2tuHmS 247 days ago
RT @DrKenCohn: Leveraging the Power of Women's Leadership in Healthcare: Please register by 10/3/11 http://t.co/YhDpO0YN #constantcontact 247 days ago
Health eVillages and telehealth healthcareitnews.com http://t.co/CnVwoj09 great use of telemedicine and remote monitoring 247 days ago
4 best types of apps for hospital use | Healthcare IT News http://t.co/p1sv6qr3 248 days ago
 

Addressing Care Delivery Challenges: Opportunities for Technology

Posted Mar 23 2011 12:00am

On a recent flight, I read a wonderful article in HFMA's magazine on using technology to address care delivery challenges.   The case study of using eICU to help keep a rural hospital's unit open fit in nicely with my comments in the Mission Critical:  Telemedicine in the ICU article.  The hospital staff have two mobile workstations that can be moved to any of the ICU or two ER Trauma bays, as needed.  The technology is used for monitoring patients at night and it has contributed to reduced length of stay and improved outcomes.  More importantly, it helped the hospital recruit a new internist so that patients can obtain quality care in their own community.

The community-wide EHR and e-visit case studies were also timely.  But keep in mind, telemedicine's bottleneck  and limited/non-existent broadband access in some communities.

Size

The FCCs Rural Broadband Capacity Survey found the average download bandwidth at rural hospitals and clinics to be between 382 and 196, and that really isn't enough for HIE (of data available in EHRs) or downloading images and video.

 

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