07/08/09
INDIANAPOLIS - Clarian Health has been named among the nation's Most Wired hospitals and health systems, according to the results of the 2009 Most Wired Survey and Benchmarking Study released in the July issue of Hospitals & Health Networks magazine.
The economic crisis is forcing many hospitals to make tough decisions with scarce resources, including delaying and scaling down information technology (IT) projects, according to a newly released survey of America's "most wired" hospitals and health systems. While progress has been made and incentives to implement IT will be available through the recently passed stimulus legislation, many hospitals still have a long way to go.
The 100 Most Wired hospitals are torn between building on their IT successes
and keeping a sharp eye on budgets. Marking its 11th year, the Most Wired
Survey and Benchmarking Study continues to lead the field in analyses and
benchmarking of healthcare IT.
"We are again honored to be named a winner for our technical innovations," said Richard Johnson, senior vice president and chief information officer, Clarian Health. "Even in the midst of this challenging economic climate, we are committed to making strategic investments in those innovative technologies and clinical resources that enhance our ability to fulfill our mission in providing consumers with patient care that is preeminent."
"The economic slowdown is forcing hospitals to look closely at IT spending," says Alden Solovy, executive editor of Hospitals & Health Networks magazine. "Most Wired hospitals are doing their best to stay the course."
To complicate matters, the great unknown of health care reform looms in the near future and a number of regulatory changes are already heading down the pike, including the shift to ICD-10.
"As the health reform debate continues, it's clear that IT will play an even more important role in the health system of tomorrow," says Rich Umbdenstock, president and CEO of the American Hospital Association (AHA). "Most Wired hospitals help illustrate IT in action-improving efficiency, quality and safety of care while helping to control costs."
Hospitals also continue to invest in IT that supports quality and safety initiatives. Investment in electronic medication management is considered one of the fundamentals of using IT to improve care. The 2009 Most Wired Survey and Benchmarking Study shows an overall increase in both provider order entry of medications and electronic bedside matching at the time medications are administered.
"Hospitals clearly recognize that in spite of smaller budgets they still need to invest in IT and position themselves for the future," says Sunny Sanyal, president of McKesson Provider Technologies. "We're seeing hospitals reprioritize. For example, instead of continuing with plans to build a new data center extension, a hospital now may choose to redirect funds to other technologies."
Of the organizations completing the survey this year, 38 hospitals and health systems - 6.8 percent of the sample - have effectively deployed information technology at both ends of the medication administration process. This compares with 23 hospitals and health systems in 2008, or 4.1 percent of the sample.
At the typical hospital responding to the survey, 26 percent of medications are entered electronically by physicians, compared with 19 percent in 2008. The typical respondent has 40 percent of medications matched at the bedside, compared with 30 percent in 2008.
The Most Wired Survey is conducted annually by Hospitals & Health Networks magazine, the journal of the AHA, which uses the results to name the 100 Most Wired hospitals and health systems. It focuses on how the nation’s hospitals use information technologies for quality, customer service, public health and safety, business processes and workforce issues.
Hospitals & Health Networks conducted the 2009 survey in cooperation with McKesson Corp. and the College of Healthcare Information Management Executives. Read the July H&HN cover story detailing the results.
About the Most Wired Survey and Benchmarking Study - Hospitals & Health Networks, the journal of the AHA, conducts the voluntary Most Wired Survey and Benchmarking Study annually and names the 100 Most Wired.
McKesson Corporation is a healthcare services and information technology company dedicated to helping its customers deliver higg-quality healthcare by reducing costs, streamlining processes, and improving the quality and safety of patient care.
CHIME was formed with the dual objective of serving the professional development needs of healthcare chief information officers and advocating the more effective use of information management within health care.
About Clarian Health - An Indiana-based, private, nonprofit organization, Clarian Health is Indiana's most comprehensive health center and one of the busiest hospital systems in the nation. Clarian owns or is affiliated with more than 20 hospitals and health centers throughout Indiana, including five in greater Indianapolis: Methodist and Indiana University hospitals, Riley Hospital for Children, Clarian West Medical Center and Clarian North Medical Center. Clarian offers a broad base of tertiary services, including specialized pediatric care at Riley Hospital for Children and a Level I Trauma Center. Clarian Health is also affiliated with IUSM, one of the nation’s largest medical schools and a national leader in medical education and research.
Content Modified on: 09/29/2009 10:50:31
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