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Hospital reaps healthy returns from wireless

February 4, 2008, 02:56 PM —  Network World — 

Seattle's Swedish Medical Center, a three-hospital campus with more than 7,000
employees and annual revenues of $1 billion, was mired in paper.

Like many healthcare organizations, the center relied on paper-based charts
to track and care for the thousands of patients its serves each year. But reliance
on paper often led to delays in care and in billing, as doctors and nurses searched
through files to find the right information to diagnose and treat patients.

"In healthcare, a lot of the process is hand-offs," explains Steve
Horsley, director of IT at the center, and a speaker at Network World's recent
IT Roadmap Conference
& Expo
in Dallas (hear a podcast
interview
with Horsley). "Information passes from the patient to the
medical assistant to the nurse to the doctor, back to the nurse, and back to
office personnel. Forms would be sitting on people's desks or were hard to read
and so forth, leading to delays. And through all that series of hand-offs, the
services that were provided were not always captured appropriately."

That meant problems in billing. "Physicians weren't documenting services
appropriately on paper, and if something isn't documented correctly, government
regulations say you can't bill for it," Horsley says.

In 2003, the center decided to tackle its paper problems by implementing a
wireless network among its metropolitan campus as part of a new electronic medical
records (EMR) system. The idea was to provide real-time, easy-to-use, accurate
information to clinicians right at the point of care.

"With wireless and the new EMR system, critical, accurate information
is available to nurses and physicians in real time, reducing delays and resulting
in better patient care overall," Horsley says. "It also makes it far
easier to code the procedures appropriately for billing purposes."

The center's new wireless network, which cost $3.8 million and was completed
in October 2007, consists of more than 1,300 Cisco access points distributed
among eight locations and linked via a metro Ethernet network. Overall, it supports
about 600 wireless workstations on wheels (WoW), 400 wireless laptops and 200
tablet PCs. And the benefits have rolled in accordingly. (See related
story
on lessons learned.)

A bevy of benefits

"The key benefit of the new setup is the mobility of information,"
Horsley says. Physicians no longer have to search for charts that may be on
a nurse's desk or in a different office. "With the wireless network, any
clinician that needs access to a patient's information can get it right away,
wherever they are. It's always available."

Billing problems have also been greatly reduced. Each time physicians provide
a service, they key it in to the EMR system along

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