Document Management Featured Content
-
Create An Environment Of Care That Makes Your Bottom Line Happier
9/24/2014
By integrating with OnBase, information typically found outside of the EMR is available from within the EMR itself, creating one complete patient record. OnBase provides a suite of products designed to work seamlessly with your EMR and your image archiving solutions of choice to create an environment of care that can keep your clinicians, your patients and your bottom line happier. Your entire healthcare organization becomes more productive and effective and, ultimately, improves patient outcomes and satisfaction.
-
Intermountain Healthcare Minimizes The Impact Of Hardcopy Paper On Their Business
8/27/2014
Intermountain Healthcare is a nonprofit health system based in Salt Lake City, Utah, with 22 hospitals, about 1,100 employed primary care and secondary care physicians at more than 185 clinics in the Intermountain Medical Group, a broad range of clinics and services, and health insurance plans from SelectHealth. They are the largest healthcare provider in the Intermountain West, with over 33,000 employees and serving the healthcare needs of Utah and southeastern Idaho residents.
-
Keeping Data In Motion: How HIPAA Affects Electronic Transfer Of Protected Health Information
1/30/2014
It is difficult to overestimate the impact that the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) has had on healthcare organizations. Patients have no doubt benefited from its security and privacy provisions, but the HIPAA regulations have also posed significant challenges – and risks – for hospitals, insurers, medical practices, individual clinicians and a variety of related businesses.
-
Isn't It Time To Get Rid Of Your Fax Machines?
1/30/2014
Each week, healthcare organizations exchange thousands upon thousands of pages of patient- and business-related data. Even with the adoption of electronic medical record (EMR) systems and other critical health information technology (HIT) systems, the preferred method of transfer in the healthcare industry remains the fax machine.
-
Onward And Upward – Predictions For 2014
12/17/2013
It’s hard to believe we are already closing out another year! With 2014 upon us, I took some time to reflect on what progress the healthcare industry made in 2013, and to contemplate what’s to come in the year ahead. This year, we saw increased investment in technologies to support gains in the efficiency and quality of patient care, and I really think that 2014 will be a year of continued evolution. By Terry Edwards, president and CEO, PerfectServe
-
Avoiding IT HIPAA Hazards
12/9/2013
With the passage of the Omnibus Final Ruling in September, 2013, many healthcare IT directors were faced with a seemingly simple question by their organizations’ senior management: “are we or aren't we HIPAA Compliant .” It seems like a simple question, but ever since the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) was enacted in 1996, hospitals, group practices and other covered entities have struggled with their response. Even with fifteen years to prepare, many providers were still scrambling to meet all the requirements defined in the Omnibus Rule. Rob Humphreys, product manager, eFax Corporate
-
Top 3 Health IT Trends To Be Thankful For
11/26/2013
It has been an interesting few years in the healthcare IT (HIT) industry and no doubt it will continue to be so moving forward. Not too long ago the Federal stimulus package went into effect to support Meaningful Use (MU) and most everyone was supportive of the goals and cautiously optimistic of the goals. Optimism was high in part because new funding was available, but also because there was a realization that the technology had finally reached a sustainable level. But as these early stages of Meaningful Use have been executed and providers move from getting funding to a state of “now what?”, pessimism has started to creep in. Rollouts like Healthcare.gov do not help this negative thinking. By Greg Chittim, Senior Director of Strategic Marketing, Arcadia Solutions
-
The End Of The Trail For Fax Servers: 6 Signs It's Time To Move To The Cloud
11/25/2013
Faxing, despite predictions of its impending demise, continues to be an indispensable service in the healthcare industry. With concerns around HIPAA compliance, particularly in light of the recent passage of the Omnibus Final Ruling, fax has been a primary secure methodology for sharing documents and data outside the organization. Many healthcare providers made substantial investments in premise fax servers and telephony lines to support the transmission of documents for physician referrals, billing, patient records, and other critical documents. By Tim Dubes, senior marketing manager, eFax Corporate®
-
Making The Case For Cloud-Based Storage
11/12/2013
Wake Forest School of Medicine is comprised of a Level 1 trauma center which receives more than 100,000 emergency visits a year and an academic program with 40 residents and 25 faculty members. Wake Forest was using antiquated processes to make medical protocols and administrative information available to physicians which resulted in the loss of critical information. Additionally, these systems were not integrated with the physician’s mobile devices, resulting in vital exam time being lost as doctors were forced to leave the exam room to find a room with computer access to search for relevant information. Resident physician Illtifat Husain, who had used Box cloud-based storage as a medical student, suggested the cloud-based storage provider to James O’Neill, M.D., assistant professor, Wake Forest Baptist department of emergency medicine, as a possible solution. After testing by a select group of residents and faculty, Wake Forest chose Box for all its cloud-based storage needs. This Q&A with O’Neill and Box health advisor Missy Krasner looks into the reasons why Box was selected and the results Wake Forest experienced. Compiled by John Oncea, editor, Health IT Outcomes
-
Loma Linda University Health Prepares For Mobility Through Culture Change
11/1/2013
Is your organization’s culture preventing more efficient processes? Many healthcare organizations have embraced the idea of digitizing records, yet despite ongoing new compliance and regulation mandates, and emerging technology for electronic health records, many have a culture that impedes process efficiency. Loma Linda University Health (LLUH) was one organization that realized it needed a culture change. Many of its departments preferred manual processes because it was comfortable for them. But when they experienced firsthand how much time and effort automating processes could save, they understood how that translated into better service for students and patients, and became champions for change. By David Lewis, VP of product marketing, Kofax