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Intel Healthcare IT

17 Posts authored by: Julie Malloy

 

 

At HIMSS 13, Craig Spencer, director of mobile clinical computing at Dell, explained how mobility has always been important in healthcare and how best to accommodate the Bring-Your-Own-Device (BYOD) trend among clinicians. His suggestion is to make sure the data is secure with features such as multifunction authentication steps like security cards, biometric readers, and full disk encryption. 

 

Watch the above video and let us know what questions you have.

 

At HIMSS 13, HP Healthcare Partner Business Manager David Perlsweig talked about the importance of mobility for clinicians, and how today’s new tablets allow them to bring information to the point-of-care. In addition, he outlined how data storage is a 24/7 need for healthcare, and what products healthcare organizations really want to deliver the best patient outcomes.

 

Watch the above video to hear more. What questions do you have?

 

At HIMSS 13, Dave Diamond, chief strategist at EMC, talked about how the IT and business sides of healthcare are now more aligned than ever, and how meeting Meaningful Use advanced that relationship. Watch the above video as he explains the opportunity going forward to analyze unstructured data and use that knowledge to benefit patient care.

 

What questions do you have?

 

At HIMSS 13, Carestream Health expert Cristine Kao talked about how to get patients involved in the healthcare discussion.  The company is launching a new portal where patients can see their healthcare images in real time and correspondent with their physicians.

 

Watch the above video and let us know what questions you have about bringing patients into the health IT conversation.

 

At HIMSS 13, Will Morris, MD, associate chief medical information officer at Cleveland Clinic, unveiled the organization's new patient care app that is a heads-up dashboard of clinical care information for physicians. This application allows clinicians to view a risk-stratified list of patients based on their health status via a live Windows* 8 interface tile. Users can then select a patient and view the updated medical record in the Windows 8 touchscreen experience.

 

In the above video, learn how the app was designed and the benefits that clinicians, and patients, will realize with its deployment on the front lines of healthcare.

 

What questions do you have?

 

Tablets were once considered companion devices in health IT. However, today’s new models, like convertibles that act as both laptop and tablet, feature extra power inside that allow clinicians to collaborate with colleagues as well as enter data into EHRs. The result? Tablets are becoming primary devices in mobile point-of-care scenarios.

 

Watch the video conversation above with Lenovo ambassador Ashley Rodrigue as she describes the impact that tablets are having on healthcare.

 

What questions do you have?

As HIMSS13 approaches, we continue our pre-show guest blog series from health IT industry experts. Below is a guest contribution from Allscripts Director of Business Development Tinal Joros on judging for the company’s Open App Challenge. This post is also available on the Allscripts blog. Watch for more pre-HIMSS posts to come soon.

 

Developers showed they are eager to “Start a Revolution” by designing and integrating applications to extend Allscripts Open Electronic Health Records software. We have 217 companies and teams registered to participate. At the close of the Allscripts Open App Challenge Phase 1, 98 of those registered submitted their ideas and integration for judging.

 

The early concepts are incredible and include tools to improve diabetes management, patient scheduling and end-of-life planning. Some apps help make safety net facility information more accessible and others help providers manage sample medications. They all have a mission to improve healthcare.

 

Our judges now have the daunting task of reviewing the submissions and selecting 15 Phase 1 winners, to be announced at the HIMSS13 annual conference, on March 4, 2013 at 3 p.m. Central time at the Allscripts booth. Judges are looking for apps that either improve management of high-cost chronic diseases or address certain value-based care imperatives.

 

Introducing our expert panel of judges

 

We’re grateful to the following people for sharing their time and talent to review submissions to the Open App Challenge:

 

• Dr. Mark Blatt joined Intel in 2000 working in the New Business Group. He is currently Worldwide Medical Director, Enterprise Solution Sales, in the Sales and Marketing Group. In this role he concentrates on how health information technology (HIT) infrastructure can enable providers to deliver cost effective, quality care to all citizens. He has a particular interest in integrated care delivery, mobile point of care, secure computing and the emergence of cloud computing services.

 

Lennox Hoyte, MD, MSEECS is a fellowship-trained specialist in Urogynecology and Female Pelvic Medicine and Reconstructive Surgery. He received his MD from Stanford, and his MSEE from MIT. Dr. Hoyte specializes in advanced robotic surgery to correct vaginal prolapse. He authored two books to help educate women about diagnosis and treatment options for pelvic floor disorders. Prior to becoming a physician, he spent 10 years as a computer systems designer and design automation specialist. This helped to prepare him for his current role as Chief Medical Information Officer for the University of South Florida (USF) Physicians Group, where he is tasked with designing and implementing an electronic health record optimized for improving healthcare outcomes while dramatically lowering the cost of providing care.

 

Daniel Kraft, MD is a Stanford- and Harvard-trained, physician-scientist, inventor, entrepreneur and innovator. Dr. Kraft has more than 20 years of experience in clinical practice, biomedical research and healthcare innovation. Dr. Kraft chairs the Medicine track for Singularity University and is Executive Director for FutureMed, a program which explores convergent, exponentially developing technologies and their potential in biomedicine and healthcare.

 

Timathie Leslie is, a vice president with Booz Allen Hamilton. She has more than twenty years of experience in the healthcare industry, assisting healthcare organizations with technology strategy, policy development, program management and technical implementation. Leslie leads the government and commercial healthcare practice for Booz Allen in the Western and Pacific regions.

 

James R. Morrow, MD opened Morrow Family Medicine on the Northside Hospital Forsyth campus in 1998. His interests include sports medicine, episodic care (care of acute problems and illnesses), chronic disease management and urgent care. A 2004 winner of the HIMSS Davies Award for Excellence in EMR Implementation, he was also recognized as the 2006 Physician IT Leader of the Year by HIMSS.

 

Bill Spooner has been chief information officer (CIO) for more than 15 of his 30 years at Sharp HealthCare. He has led an aggressive IT effort that placed Sharp on the Hospitals and Health Networks 100 Most Wired list for 12 of the list's first 14 years. Sharp was an early leader in electronic health records and has received several awards for its consumer website. In 2011 he was named by Information Week as one of the 25 leaders driving the health care IT revolution.

 

Jeffrey L. Sunshine, MD PhD is vice president and chief medical information officer at University Hospitals (UH), in Cleveland. Dr. Sunshine provides leadership to the information technology and services teams as they developed and now expand the health system’s $100 million electronic medical record (EMR) project.  In addition to 10 years in healthcare information technology, he has more than 20 years of experience in Neuroradiology.

 

We’re off to a great start, thanks to these dedicated judges and the innovators who submitted apps. We’re also grateful to Intel for co-sponsoring the Allscripts Open App Challenge Developer Conferences.

 

We’ll share the Phase 1 results at HIMSS13. You can find updates on our website.

 

Any words of advice or encouragement you’d like to share with our judges?

North Carolina is known for basketball, barbecue and beaches. However, my current home state is also becoming a hotbed of healthcare IT innovation.

 

That’s why the North Carolina Healthcare Information and Communications Alliance, Inc. (NCHICA) and Intel Corporation have announced a new series of Health IT Innovation Awards to recognize outstanding applications of technology and unique approaches to improve the quality and efficiency of healthcare delivery within the United States.

 

Three broad categories have been designated for award consideration: Information Technology, Informatics/Analytics, and Consumer Engagement:

 

Information Technology – Innovations in the use of IT including: improving quality at the point of care; strengthening the security of protected health information; facilitating health information exchange; achieving Meaningful Use, etc.

 

Informatics & Analytics – Innovations in the use of informatics and analytics to improve: the quality of care; health outcomes; population health, etc.

 

Consumer Engagement – Innovations that improve consumer engagement with their care while protecting patient privacy including such tools as: patient portals; mobile apps, etc.

 

Nominations are due by March 8, 2013. You do not need to be from North Carolina to enter.

 

Three finalists in each category will be selected by a panel of NCHICA members and other industry experts serving on the Awards Selection Committee. Nine finalists will be notified on March 29. The finalists will be recognized and the three winners will be announced and honored at a Gala Awards Celebration on May 7, 2013. 

 

For further details and nominating criteria, visit http://www.nchica.org/HITNomination.pdf.

 

What questions do you have?

As HIMSS13 approaches, today we kick off our pre-show guest blog series from health IT industry experts. Below is a guest contribution from Allscripts Director of Strategic Marketing, Michael Loesel, on phase one of the company’s Open App Challenge. This post is also available on the Allscripts blog. Watch for more pre-HIMSS posts to come in the next two weeks.

 

As I shared in my post, What’s Motivating Healthcare Innovators?, I’m encouraged by my conversations with Allscripts Open App Challenge developers. Solving healthcare problems is not about financial gain for them; it’s a mission to help others.

 

It’s about transforming healthcare. To make this happen, all of healthcare IT has to work together – and so do our solutions. Interoperability is key to unlocking the potential that technology has to offer. The Open App Challenge holds promise beyond any one vendor or company. By fostering innovation and collaboration, we have a much better chance to solve problems we once thought were unsolvable.

 

Phase One of the challenge is underway

We’ll likely have far more high-quality applications than we can recognize. I wish I were one of the judges that will review fascinating ideas from inspiring innovators.

 

Consider Dr. Phillip Lisagor, a retired cardio-thoracic surgeon. His mission is to help physicians and patients have the tough conversations needed to plan for end of life. Dr. Lisagor envisions “Rest Of Your Life” or “ROYL” champions in healthcare.

 

Then there is Dr. Tashfeen Ekram. After having difficulty rescheduling a dentist appointment for himself, he recognized a need for better scheduling options for patients in his own practice. He’s working towards a solution that will notify patients who are willing to be seen sooner of recent cancellations.

 

Declan Frye has a mission, too. He is creating tools for social workers and hospital discharge planners to quickly identify safety net facilities – such as nursing homes, mental health or substance abuse facilities. Access to this information can improve care coordination for patients as they move from one provider to another.

 

These are just a few examples from the surge of innovations happening today in healthcare. We’ll share more news from the Open App Challenge as it progresses.

 

You can see highlights of my video chats with CEOs and Founders of HappyHealth.me, SampleRx, Purple Binder, ROYL, Chiron Data Systems, mHealthCoach and more.

 

What do their stories tell you about today’s healthcare innovators?

Intel was a supporter of last week’s GETHealth Summit in New York City. Below is a guest blog from Alice Borrelli, Director, Global Healthcare Policy, Intel Corporation, who participated in one of the event’s panel discussions.

 

Last week at the United Nations, more than 400 delegates from around the world met at the GETHealth Summit to discuss the question, “how do we GETHealth in emerging markets through ICT for the frontline healthcare worker?”

 

Public and private sector leaders of health programs, educators, donors, governments, and the IT industry came together equipped with our technology solutions, eLearning modules, best practices and social media reach and found a distinct difference at this conference. The time for pilots and PowerPoint presentations is over. They were replaced with a dynamic conversation, systems design, mapping in-country progress and an announcement of a serious fund raising initiative.

 

We were reminded of the critical importance of training healthcare workers who augment care in African countries with less than five physicians per 100,000 patients. Can a combination of digital learning, access to clinical decision support tools and patient records provide the needed training that will lower those shocking statistics? All while ensuring that mothers and children have a chance for not only survival, but a healthy live course? Can this become the new norm?

GETHealth photo.JPG

Joining the panel on institutional policy and regulations last week at the GETHealth Summit were (right to left): Gary Fowlie, Head of Strategy and Policy Unit, ITU; Larry Irving, Co-Founder, The Mobile Alliance for Global Good; Alice Borrelli, Director of Global Health and Workforce Policy, Intel; Mick Keyes, Senior Technologist, Enterprise Group, Hewlett Packard, and Karen Schulder Rheuban, Director of University of Virginia Center for Telehealth.

 

As I see it, the answers to these questions are, “not without global and local policies in place that will create a pathway to speed the necessary training, testing, and refresher programs to the frontline worker.” Joining the panel on institutional policy and regulations last week at the GETHealth Summit, I came prepared to offer the Intel experience of standards based solutions for rapid growth, innovation and lower costs to go to market by instituting tried and tested Health IT “gold standards” including HL7, LOINC, SNOMED CT, ICD10, RxNorm and Continua.

 

The use of these standards facilitates data exchange among communities, hospitals and regions. Not everyone in the session agreed, and challenges to these recommendations were thoughtful and important to consider in emerging markets. These questions were brought to the discussion: “should we pursue a lighter standards approach?, and are there emerging  technologies that will ensure the connection of training materials to health records and population health data repositories that will give a more in-depth understanding of the region’s healthcare challenges and treatments?

 

WHO and the ITU are convening standards bodies, governments, ICT companies and NGOs to discuss these issues and we are encouraged by their progress. Intel is supporting these efforts by providing expertise and technical assistance. We would go one step further and propose to the NGOs, foundations, governments and corporations that have been supporters and funders of frontline healthcare worker training, that we unite in our commitment to standards and the interoperability of both technology and programs.

 

Can we agree to require future funding be tied to the demonstrated ability for programs and technology to work together at every level before the funding is released? Should standards based designs be a requirement for the deployment of the digital delivery of education for frontline healthcare workers?  It’s an approach that we hope will be debated as the next level of funding is rolled out through the leadership of Jeffrey, Sachs, Director, The Earth Institute, which we expect to be the turning point for achieving the 1 million X 2015 goal.

 

Sincere thanks to Bob Bollinger and the leadership teams from Johns Hopkins Center for Clinical Global Health Education, the Global Partnerships Forum and the governments of Ethiopia, Norway, Rwanda and Uganda for convening this inspirational and impactful conference.  We are ready to go beyond Powerpoints.

 

What questions do you have?

 

More information on the Intel skoool™ Healthcare Education Platform, the company’s open access multi-media platform to strengthen the skills of midwives and community health workers maybe found through the partnership organizations: UNFPA, and USAID’s mPowering Frontline Health Workers.

HIMSS 2013 is fast approaching and we’re looking forward to a great event in New Orleans. To get the excitement churning for the show, we’re hosting our second annual Twitter sweepstakes where you can win some of HIMSS’ best-selling health IT books for your library.

 

Over the course of the next three weeks, simply follow us at @IntelHealthIT, watch for our contest tweets, retweet our contest-related messages using the #IntelHIMSS hashtag and you’re entered to win. That’s it. You could take home one of these top HIMSS publications:

 

Feb. 4 – 7 we’re giving away:

• One copy of Beyond Return on Investment: Expanding the Value of Health Information Technology

• One copy of The Health Information Exchange Formation Guide

 

Feb. 11 – 14 we’re giving away:

• One copy of Implementing Business Intelligence in Your Healthcare Organization

• One copy of CMIO Survival Guide

 

Feb. 18 – 21 we’re giving away:

• One copy of The CEO-CIO Partnership: Harnessing the Value of IT

• One copy of Information Security in Healthcare: Managing Risk

 

Two lucky winners will be chosen each week. Winners will be announced on Twitter each Friday. Terms and conditions of the contest listed here.

 

At HIMSS, we’ll be on Twitter throughout the event keeping you up-to-date on the most recent content and sharing insights from the show floor and seminars.

 

Enjoy the Twitter contest and we hope you walk away with a new HIMSS book for your bookshelf. Good luck!

Implementing cloud computing technology means choices. Do you choose public cloud, private cloud, or a hybrid cloud? We asked some industry insiders for their opinions and thoughts on cloud computing in healthcare technology.

 

In the below video, you'll hear from Chris Gough, Intel Healthcare Solutions Architect, Mark Woodward, Healthcare CTO at EMC, and Chris Mertens, Vice President of the Personal Systems Group/Healthcare Practice at HP, on their thoughts and recommendations for setting up a healthcare cloud environment.

 

What questions do you have?

 

Mobility is at the center of healthcare information technology. These days doctors need the ability to review medical records, see images and make clinical decisions wherever they are. And it’s the CIOs job to manage these devices that allow this process to happen.

 

In the below video, learn more about the rise of mobility and hear what some health IT experts recommend. You will hear from: Justin Steinman, VP/GM of Marketing, Clinical Business Solutions, GE Healthcare IT; Gary Zegiestowsky, CEO, Informatics Corporation of America (ICA); and Justin Barnes, Industry and Government Affairs, Greenway Medical Technologies.

 

What questions do you have?

 

As healthcare providers adopt electronic medical records (EMRs) and other digital health information tools, they’re creating a wealth of data—and looking for ways to gain added value from it. That’s why Intel and GE Healthcare are using technology innovation to help practices track and increase quality of care.

 

In the below video and accompanying white paper, Data Analysis in a Private Cloud Helps Drive Healthcare Improvements, learn more from Jon D. Morrow, MD, senior medical leader, GE Healthcare, on how GE Healthcare’s  Medical Quality Improvement Consortium  project securely analyses de-identified data in more than 30 million health records to help healthcare organizations improve quality, benchmarking and population-based medical research.

 

 

Read the paper and let us know what questions you have.

There's little doubt that tablets are making headway into healthcare IT. Your challenge as a health IT pro is to make sure your staff has the right tablets to collaborate and provide quality patient care.


With so many choices on the market, how do you pick the right health IT tablet? In the below video, spend a few minutes with Eric Dishman, director of health innovation and policy for Intel's Digital Health Group, as he explains how to evaluate mobile technologies and how to find the right mobile device for clinicians. As you will hear, consumer-friendly tablets are not always the best solution.


What questions do you have about tablets?