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Healthcare Keyboards
The Problem
• Hospital-acquired infections rank as the fourth leading cause of
death in America.
• The numbers are staggering: according to the CDC, two million
patients fall ill to infections in hospitals each year. More than
100,000 patients die annually as a result, which is as many as those
who die from breast cancer, AIDS and motor vehicle accidents —
combined.
• As of October 2008, Medicare no longer reimburses hospitals for
the cost of treating a number of preventable infections acquired
there (called nosocomial infections). The hospitals must take a loss,
since they also are not allowed to charge the sick patients for the
cost of treatment.
• Infections acquired through contamination are the most difficult to
treat, because they are often antibiotic-resistant.
www.patientsafetyfocus.com
Keyboards in Healthcare
• Researchers at Chicago's Northwestern Memorial
Hospital say computer keyboards can harbor dangerous
germs for as long as 24 hours.
• Research teams at the hospital contaminated keyboards
with three types of bacteria that can cause lifethreatening infections in severely ill hospital patients.
They found that the bacteria known as VRE and MRSA
survived for at least 24 hours, while PSAE bacteria
survived for an hour.
• When volunteers tapped a key contaminated with
MRSA, the bacteria spread to their hands 92 percent of
the time. Contamination rates are lower for the other two
bacteria -- 50 percent for VRE and 18 percent for PSAE.
Costs of HAI
• The average charges for Medicare patients with a
hospital- acquired infection were about $160,000,
compared to $32,000 for Medicare patients who did
not contract an infection.
• For Medicaid patients, the average charges were
approximately $391,000 for patients who
contracted an infection while hospitalized,
compared to an average of $29,700 where an
infection did not occur.
• Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus
(MRSA), a widely publicized type of antibioticresistant hospital-acquired infection, can cost
hospitals roughly $30,000 per case.
Healthcare Providers
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Integrated Delivery Networks (IDN’s)
 Cover large geographical areas through a network of care delivery systems
 May Also be referred to as an Integrated Delivery System (IDS)
Academic Health Systems
 Drive the new visions and standards of care delivery
Community and Regional
 Usually 100 beds or less. They tend to be more frugal because of limited resources
Specialty Hospitals
 Tend to set the standard for care in select specialties
 Usually get marketed as most innovative
Clinics and Centers
 Can be independent or part of an IDN
 Usually for profit so competition drives purchasing
 Specialty
Practices
 Physician and Dental Offices
Senior Care
 Skilled Nursing
 Assisted Living
Home Health
 Visiting Nurses
 CNA’s
 Telehealth
 Rehab
Healthcare by the Numbers
Total US Workers
13,000,000
US Hospitals (2009)
5,815
Staffed Beds (2009)
951,045
Nursing and Residential Care (2004)
69,342
US Nursing Homes (2010)
16,500
SNF Beds (2010)
1,700,000
Ambulatory Care Centers (2002)
489,021
Dental Offices
118,305
Physician Offices (non-mental health)
192,794
Outpatient Clinics
25,750
Diagnostic Laboratories
11,079
Hardware Solutions for Healthcare
 Office Solutions
 Used for Practice Management, EMR and EHR and Electronic Prescribing
 Document Management
 PACS/RIS/CR
 Picture Archiving System/Radiology Information System/ Computed Radiography
 The digitization and manipulation of Digital Images for diagnosis
 Includes 3-D imaging and analysis
 HIS Hospital Information System
 Usually describes Hospital or IDN Network deployment
 Hospital Mobility or Patient Care
 Point of Care Systems
 Usually refers to devices that help track data at point of care
 Patient Infotainment
 Security and Environmental
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Access Control
Patient Safety Systems
Wayfinding
Digital Signage
Who Should You Be Talking To?
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OEM’s and ISV’s
 Engage as you would currently
IDN’s and Hospitals
 Purchasing Department
 IT Department
 Infection Control
Clinics and Centers
 Office Manager
 Business Manager
 IT Staff
 Clinic Ownership
Practices
 Office Manager
 Business Manager
 IT Staff
 Practice Ownership
Senior Care
 Administrator
 Facility Maintenance Manager
 IT
 Purchasing
 May Need to Engage Corporate if it’s Multi Facility Entity
Home Health
 No Current Market
Healthcare Computer Manufacturers
Advantech
Amrel
Arbor
Cybernetman
Dedicated Computing
Dell
HP
JAO Tech (Netherlands)
Medix (Tangent)
Motion Computing
Panasonic Toughbook
Tangent
WinComm
Healthcare ISV’s
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Accusoft Pegasus
Allscripts
Athena Health
Eclypsis
Epic
GE Centricity (IDX)
McKesson
Merge
Misys
Sage
Healthcare Grade Televisions
PDI
HCI
Philips
LG (Zenith)
Sharp
Healthcare Television Distributors
HealthCare Media Technologies
TB&A (HospitalTV.com)
Pharmacy Solutions
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SwissLog
AllScripts
McKesson
Amerisource Bergin
QS/1
Beds and Accessories
 Curbell Electronics
 Stryker Medical
 Hill-Rom
Patient Infotainment Systems
Skylight Healthcare Systems
Vigo
TeleHealth Services (iKey keyboard)
Lodgenet
GetWell Network
myStation
eVideon
Medivista (Lincor Solutions)
Thinix
Keyboards in Healthcare
Healthcare Office Products
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J82-16001
G83-6104 or G83-6105
G86-71401
G83-14501
Healthcare Kiosk and Wayfinding
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J86-4400
G86-62401
G84-5500
G84-4400
Point of Care
• J84-4300
• J84-2120
Strong Authentication
G83-14600/14700 AuthenTec Swipe Keyboard
Strong Authentication
ST-1503 eHealth Terminal
G87-1504 eHealth Smart Card Keyboard
ST-2062 eHealth Terminal
Mice
• M4200
• M2800
Keyboard Covers
Thank You!