April 9, 2009 - A fundamental issue facing healthcare worldwide is tying fragmented information and data silos together to increase intelligence, and Initiate Interoperable Health solutions showcased its vendor-neutral “middleware” to bridge disparate data during HIMSS 2009 in Chicago this week.

The company says it can help connect multiple PACS silos that do not interoperate by supplying a software layer above these silos to extract data and images, which can be shared enterprise-wide.

The software can be used to achieve a system-wide view of patient data, regardless of the use of several data systems from different departments and vendors. It can provide a single source for patient demographic information including contact, payer source and primary care physician for use by clinical and administrative information systems. Initiate also can help pave the way to integrate with regional health information organizations (RHIOs).

An example of how Initiate helped customers’ processes includes a large integrated delivery system that had a 3 percent error rate when trying to post ECG information to the correct patient file. Initiate’s solutions were used to create a master patient index that virtually eliminated errors during the critical data exchange process. Another institution was unable to effectively comply with Joint Commission standards for tracking provider privileges and credentialing. Initiate’s technology now provides a single, reliable view of information on 63,000 providers affiliated with the facility. A healthcare system’s nursing staff was wasting hours hunting for information to prepare patients for the OR. Initiate provided a foundation for an interoperable platform that has delivered an 82 percent reduction in the time it takes OR nurses to gather patient information, and a 50 percent increase in the number of patients fully prepped on schedule.

Initiate Interoperable Health supports increased productivity by addressing data quality issues like duplicate records and the costs associated with redundant testing, lost referrals and missing clinical results. Clinicians can spend more time with patients and less time hunting and gathering information about a patient.

For more information: visit www.InitiateSystems.com


Related Content

News | Artificial Intelligence

July 26, 2024 — GE HealthCare and Amazon Web Services, Inc. (AWS), an Amazon.com, Inc. company, announced a strategic ...

Time July 26, 2024
arrow
Videos | Information Technology

Industry trade shows and conferences seem to be making their comeback in 2024. And the Healthcare Information and ...

Time July 25, 2024
arrow
News | Digital Pathology

July 24, 2024 — Proscia, a developer of artificial intelligence (AI)-enabled digital pathology solutions for precision ...

Time July 24, 2024
arrow
News | RSNA

July 23, 2024 — Professional registration is open for RSNA 2024, the world’s largest radiology forum. This year’s theme ...

Time July 23, 2024
arrow
News | Artificial Intelligence

July 23, 2024 — Researchers at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) found that an artificial intelligence (AI) model ...

Time July 23, 2024
arrow
News | Digital Pathology

July 12, 2024 — AGFA HealthCare, a global leader in healthcare imaging management solutions, announced that Enterprise ...

Time July 12, 2024
arrow
News | Digital Pathology

July 12, 2024 — Diagnosing cancer and providing the personalized therapy it often requires, is a collaborative effort ...

Time July 12, 2024
arrow
Feature | Imaging Technology News - ITN

Be sure to check out the latest digital edition of Imaging Technology News (ITN), featuring the Mobile C-arm Systems ...

Time July 11, 2024
arrow
Feature | PACS | By Michael J. Cannavo

Back in 1966, Joni Mitchell sang these words in her song “Both Sides Now:” I’ve looked at clouds from both sides now ...

Time July 08, 2024
arrow
Feature | Radiology Business

ITN conducts a bi-monthly survey to its readers on a variety of topics, which is used to create the Last Read, a unique ...

Time July 08, 2024
arrow
Subscribe Now