Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Ankur Seth Mobile Strategy for BIDMC June 4, 2010 Agenda 1. Scope and Recommendation 2. Methodology 3. Proposed solutions –Lab and Medication workflow 4. Risk and Mitigation Plan 5. How other players are preparing for future? 6. Long term strategy and implementation 7. Assumptions and Risk 8. Recommendation 2 Scope • Immediate solutions for using mobile devices in scenarios— -- Medication Management -- Lab sample collection workflow • Long term strategy for mobile devices usage in BIDMC 3 Immediate Recommendation Correct Patient Identification requires Front end Labeling at patient bedside Every bedside Bar code scanners with display ICU/ED Label printer on bedside Wards Use a cart with shelves – Bluetooth enabled Label printer for each phlebotomist and nurse 4 Long Term Recommendation • Become vendor/ device agnostic, support applications, let user decide what form factor they need accessibility • Set up an Innovation mobility lab – due diligence on new technologies/offerings usable in our workflow and support accordingly 5 Methodology Requirements Gathering at BIDMC Mapped user pain Identified Best Practices points with present technologies Research on present technologies 6 Pain points Nurses • Nurses move back and forth, use shared printers • Work load can be overwhelming, human error possible • Too many different devices used in care settings Lab and Admin • Right sample/drug, right patient at the right time • If Lab does not receive correct labels, rework causes delays and can lead to errors • Standardized processes should be followed everywhere Physicians • There should be quality check near the bedside • Turn around time is the key in ED 7 Best Practices from other settings Health Systems Mayo Clinic Best Practices Future Phlebotomist drags a CoW with all the devices , views Standardization access to EMR , and EMR and scans, prints from its CoW printing strategy in mobile environment Partners (B&H , MGH) Mediation workflow is automated, Lab sample is not. iPod has opened doors for many others Carts have scanners and boxes filled with drugs for to follow and invent. Future can be patients Healthcare iTunes/ Podcast Unit level planning in different workflows. Barcode scanner in every bed . Specimen collection by rugged The ideal device might not be invented handheld and mobile wireless printer yet, but we need to be prepared for it Mandatory training sessions before circulating any device. Major usage in BlackBerry and Motion C5 Exploring new device usage Bed side administration of medication-right drug to right patient Exploring new device usage Intuitive applications will force users to Owns applications, does not configure devices, Bar use devices which can ease their Code technology reduces errors* workflow VA Clinicians decide if this device is good for them HCA Johns Hopkins Hospital M.D. Anderson Center Tenet Kaiser Permanente Mobility Innovation Lab. Use Bar code extensively Successful enterprise wide deployment of iPhone using Provide secure access to information Mobility can be used for accessing health info anytime, ability to self manage health. * Ref – Publication on Effect on Bar code technology on safety by B&W –New England JoM ‘10 8 Gaps with Present Technologies • No one device fit in all solution—viewer, printer, scanner • Usability and Form factor are key decision criterion • Products cannot be customized based on user preferences • Ability to work with CPOE and eMAR in future needs to be tested 9 Proposed solutions—Lab Workflow & Medication Management Bar Code Scanners Label Printers ED* on bed side (50) on bed side (50) ICU* on bed side (77) Wards on bed side (544) on bed side (77) keep on a mailing/shopping cart with other devices(12+60) * Maximum error prone places—Ref Clinical Pathology Quality Report Q4-09 10 Process Improvement required • ED – Label printed at triage and • ED - Need bed side printing carried all the way • ICU – Centralized printer location, not easily accessible • Wards – Carry multiple devices • Ambulatory– Batch printing of labels • ICU - Keep printer in central location, access to nearby rooms • Wards – Provide carts with racks/drawers to organize equipments • Ambulatory –Batch labeling should not be allowed. 12 Pros and Cons of Recommendation Pros Cons Scanners used in both Lab and A large inventory to manage Medication Workflow Support bed side administration Enterprise wide deployment ED and ICU have greatest potential for error - give them scanner and label printer at point of care Workflow change required Scanner can be integrated in eMAR and LIS to tell if right amount of drug given, right sample 13 Risks and Mitigation Risks • Bar code scanner get stolen. • Batteries run dead • Process Adherence Mitigation • Use existing active RFID inventory tracking to avoid theft • Make processes mandatory to maintain the integrity of the system • Mandatory training to nurses and phlebotomists using these devices 14 The Future • Consumer products are gaining popularity • Apple ahead of the race / Other players are coming with their offerings • Native applications, App store and ease of use strengthening them • Information, accessibility to data is within the reach of healthcare professionals 15 Thinking Long term—Problem of plenty Companies Dell Microsoft New Innovation Dell-Tablet; Applications Run in virtual environment Windows Phone 7, Augmented Reality Palm; HP Labs –Paper computing, Smart dust for infection HP control Native App creating difference, usability gives apple an Apple advantage RIM Ability to talk with peripherals, privacy compliance Vecna Using robots for providing care Google health as a back end database accessible from any Google device Perfect Serve Intelligent message routing system Patient Keeper Application :: Intuitive Report viewing tool Voalte Application :: Communication inside hospital Application::Primary Doc to Expert doc connection 16 What Key Opinion Leaders say? • Google, Sr. Prod Manager- ’Consumer centric Health management might be the calling‘ • mHealth, VP- ’Mobile devices and applications will be used as resources in Disease Management ‘ • Microsoft, Director -’Phones can be used as a window to a different world in future’ • HP, BDM – ’If you don’t take user feedback, you’ll end up making mistakes. Knowing your user is the key’ 17 What other hospitals say? • John Hopkins ,CIO – The ideal device might not be invented yet, but we need to be prepared for it • Partners Healthcare ,CTO –There’s a class of notifications, views and transactions that healthcare consumers expect to access on the go • VA, Director, Emerging Health Technology – Mobility needs to support the concept of Care anywhere and everywhere • Kaiser, Head Clinical Innovations– Devices might be hyped, but mobility is an operating reality, it is hear to stay. 18 Our Long Term Strategies • Mobile devices can change their nature/form in future Strategy • Work on accessibility, don’t lock a device • Be vendor/device agnostic • Let consumer own the device • Goal—Improve user workflows 19 Proposed implementation Set up an Innovation mobility lab – • Collaborate with vendors(Apple, HP, Google etc) and research labs (MIT Media, IBM IRL) • Perform due diligence of new technologies/offerings • Usability analysis in our workflow and support accordingly • Users bring their device, we provide accessibility to system 20 Criterion for selection • Data Security • Infection Prone • Inter-operatibility • Form Factor • Connectivity • Support The final push by the user 21 Assumption and Risks Assumptions • Medical Safety will be improved by using technology • Devices will continue to evolve • Apple will not be the only player in the market Risk • Data Security • Infection propagation • FDA compliance • Technology adding to process overheads 22 Conclusion • How mobile devices can be used in clinical settings? • I have workflow related problems Can mobile devices/application solve them? If they can help me on my pain points, definitely they can be used 23 Recommendation Frontend labeling Every bedside Bar code scanners ICU/ED Label Printer on bedside Wards Use a cart with shelves -- Label Printer for each phlebotomist and nurses • Become vendor/ device agnostic, support applications, • Let user decide what form factor they need accessibility • Set up an Innovation mobility lab 24 Acknowledgements • Amy Goldman • Brigitte Bowen • Gina McCormack • Henry Fieldman • Holly Dowling • Jan Olson • Jane Foley • Joe Cross • John Powers • Julius Yang • Kim Sulmonte • Larry Markson • Larry Nathanson • Pat Folcarelli • Rebecca Hildebrand • Tricia Bourie John Halamka 25 Thank You 26