Title: Pella Regional Health Center
1Pella Regional Health Center
- Health Information System Selection
2Organizational Overview
- Licensed for 47 acute care beds
- 109-bed long-term care unit (24-bed dementia
unit) - Emergency and urgent care departments
- Occupational health clinic
- Five family health clinics (Pella, Bussey, Sully,
Monroe and Knoxville) - Specialty clinics
- Hospital-based dialysis unit
3Organizational Overview
- Surgical Services
- Rehabilitative services
- Hospice
- Home Health
- 100-bed residential care facility
- Independent living campus
4A New Vision
- To establish a fully integrated enterprise-wide
information system encompassing clinical and
financial applications which are tied to a
patient-centric database enabling data to flow to
authorized customers through internal and
external networks.
5Potential Derailment
- Negotiated with a single vendor
- Unable to reach an affordable price
- Ongoing concern with respect to the perceived
level of risk
6Revived the search process!
7Back to Basics
- Which vendor and products?
- How much should be spent?
- The nursing process in IS?
8Existing Vendors/Applications
9Existing Vendors/Applications
10Diagnosis
- Ineffective Communication related to multiple
silos of data
11Silos of Data
- Redundant processes
- Less than optimal patient safety
- Labor intensive data analysis and reporting
12Diagnosis
- Management of Therapeutic Regimen, Challenging
Community
13Multiple Systems (Including a Paper-based
Medical Record)
- Patient-specific data not readily accessible
- Shadow charts created within departments
- Labor intensive for IS staff
- Maximum value NOT derived from individual systems
14Dispel the Myths
- We will find the perfect system
- If you build it - they will come!
- Implementing a new HIS will automatically solve
organizational inefficiencies - Mass consensus and enthusiasm for a vendor will
be the key indicator for the right choice
15Overall Approach(Source Dr. Leo Black, Mayo
Clinic Jacksonville)
- There are choices to be made
- Choice 1
- Start with the big picture and later
- develop individual programs
- OR
- Start with individual programs and later try
to link them
16Choice 1
- Start with the big picture and later develop
(enhance) individual programs. - Data center design and build
- Migrate current functionality to new HIS
- Enterprise-wide order entry with focus toward
point-of-care medical necessity checking - Enterprise-wide EMR for resulting
17Overall Approach(Source Dr. Leo Black, Mayo
Clinic Jacksonville)
- Choice 2
- Go predominantly with one vendor
- OR
- Go with best of breed
18Choice 2
- Go predominately with one vendor.
- Minimize interfaces
- Similar look and feel across the enterprise
- Ultimately achieve maximum utilization of
functionality - Sound Easy?
19Which Vendor?
- Consultant
- Request for information and request for proposal
- Current state was evaluated
- Written report submitted
- Functional specifications provided by consultant
and sent to relevant departments
20Lessons Learned
- Interview several consulting firms and evaluate
their methods for facilitating your selection
process - Pose questions that uncover a one size fits all
approach - Identify potential conflicts of interest
- Request references of similar organizations
conduct conference calls to solicit their
experience and satisfaction -
21Lessons Learned
- Define deliverables and establish realistic
expectations - Maintain leadership a consultant will never
know your organization as well as you, nor will
they lead you to the perfect system!
22Best of Breed Sirens
23Identify Health Information System (HIS) Vendors
- Retrieved the 2003 HIMSS Conference Exhibitor
List - Quick scan of websites to identify health
information system vendors - Categorized vendors
24HIS Vendor Offerings
- Created a table to identify the clinical
components of each vendors HIS - Eight vendors provided registration, scheduling,
clinical data repository, order management,
clinical documentation, laboratory, medical
imaging, pharmacy and health information
management
25Potential Vendors
- Cerner
- CPSI
- Dairyland
- Epic
- Keane
- McKesson
- MediTech
- Siemens
26Overall Approach(Source Dr. Leo Black, Mayo
Clinic Jacksonville)
- Choice 3
- View this as an isolated project/function
- OR
- View this as part of an overall
institutional strategy
27Information Technology Portfolio
Strategic
Informational
Transactional
Infrastructure
28Information Technology Portfolio
Business integration Business flexibility Reduced
IT costs Standardization
Infrastructure
29Information Technology Portfolio
Process the basic, repetitive transactions
Developed to cut costs, often by substituting
capital for labor, or handle higher volumes
25 40 return on investment The more money
invested in transaction information technology,
the stronger the impact on performance
successful in creating business value Low risk
Transactional
30Information Technology Portfolio
Informational
Provides the information for managing and
controlling the organization
Must derive the right to realize a business
value Can lead to superior quality and premium
pricing
31Information Technology Portfolio
Strategic
Increased sales Competitive advantage Market
positioning Innovative services
Inherently risky 50 fail Some spectacular
successes 2- to 3- year lead
32Overall Approach(Source Dr. Leo Black, Mayo
Clinic Jacksonville)
- Choice 4
- Is a positive financial return very important
in the near term? - OR
- Is financial return of lower importance than
other goals?
33Estimating Return on Investment (ROI)
- Financial return was deemed important and
necessary, but a long-term view was utilized. - Literature review completed
- Vendor estimates reviewed
- Potential line items identified, linked with
literature citations and issues for consideration
34Line Items within ROI
- Gain in patient volumes within out-patient
clinics - Gain in surgical net revenue
- Reduction in file clerk positions in HIM
- Reduction in labor costs associated with charge
entry - Avoidance of inappropriate/redundant orders
- Reduced denials
35Line Items within ROI
- Increase in-patient charge capture
- Increase out-patient charge capture
- Reduction in paper forms and supplies
- Reduction in labor costs associated with data
collection/analysis - Reduction in labor costs related to pharmacy
billing - Decreased nursing overtime