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As a subscriber you can listen to articles at work, in the car, or while you work out. Subscribe NowCall it Expedia for hospital systems.
Community Health Network has spent three years developing a computer interface that allows doctors and nurses to view all
information and records on a patient in one viewing program. Community calls it a virtual single patient record.
It works in the same way Expedia pulls together
plane ticket information from numerous airlines.
That means patient records from Community’s five hospitals, its outpatient centers, its radiology
departments and even network-affiliate physicians can be accessible at the same moment from any computer
that can access the program.
Community thinks its program can save it more than $8 million annually and improve patient care by cutting down on errors,
hospital-acquired infections and duplicative work.
Those are also the goals of the Indiana Health Information Exchange and other organizations that
facilitate sharing records among hospitals. But Dr. Harry Laws, Community’s chief medical information
officer, said there’s plenty of room for improvement within hospital systems.
Laws said Community is in negotiations with the
Indiana Health Information Exchange to add its records into Community’s virtual single patient record.
These kinds of patient records already exist
within massive, integrated health care systems, he said, such as the U.S. Department of Defense, the
U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs and California-based Kaiser Permanente. But he said Community is one of
the first community-based hospitals to implement such a system.
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