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	<title>Comment Feed for Channel 9 - Saving money, saving lives: Vanderbilt&#39;s perioperative information management system</title>
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		<title>Channel 9 - Saving money, saving lives: Vanderbilt&#39;s perioperative information management system</title>
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	<description> Does information technology really improve care quality and safety?&amp;nbsp; Can&amp;nbsp;well designed and implemented&amp;nbsp;clinical software applications really improve physician satisfaction?&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Can healthcare information technology really have a positive return on investment?&amp;nbsp; For Vanderbilt University Medical Center&#39;s perioperative anesthesia department the answers are yes, yes, and yes!&amp;nbsp; While not every&amp;nbsp;IT solution in healthcare&amp;nbsp;clearly demonstrates results as stunning as&amp;nbsp;those I&#39;m about to share,&amp;nbsp; here&#39;s what I gleaned from a keynote presentation made by Dr. Paul St. Jacques earlier this week at&amp;nbsp;the MSHUG Tech Forum 2007 in Redmond. Dr. St. Jacques shared the stage with me on day one&amp;nbsp;of the conference.&amp;nbsp; I delivered the&amp;nbsp;opening keynote, and he&amp;nbsp;provided the&amp;nbsp;close. &amp;nbsp;  Dr.&amp;nbsp;St. Jacques is Associate Professor and Director of Anesthesiology Informatics in the anesthesiology department at Vanderbilt.&amp;nbsp; Vanderbilt&#39;s perioperative information management system, VPIMS,&amp;nbsp;serves as &amp;quot;master control&amp;quot; for the medical center&#39;s&amp;nbsp;60 operating rooms in 6 suites, handling thousands of surgical cases each year.&amp;nbsp; You may be surprised to&amp;nbsp;learn that less than 5 percent of&amp;nbsp;all surgeries in America are fully managed and documented electronically.&amp;nbsp; That&#39;s right.&amp;nbsp; In the year 2007, 95 percent of the &amp;quot;life and death&amp;quot; work-flow processes in surgery&amp;nbsp;are still done on paper. So what&#39;s to be gained by going electronic?&amp;nbsp; How about a 100 percent improvement in on-time cases starts, or a 90 percent compliance with perioperative antibiotic protocols resulting in an 1 percent decrease in surgical wound infections.&amp;nbsp; How about a&amp;nbsp;67 percent reduction in chart errors.&amp;nbsp; How about the average time to produce a billable chart moving from 12 days to 1, with a&amp;nbsp;$1 Million plus&amp;nbsp;improvement in formerly lost revenues.&amp;nbsp; Or how about a 10 percent yearly increase in case volume without adding&amp;nbsp;capacity, keeping in mind that&amp;nbsp;every additional case per day generates more than&amp;nbsp;$1 Million&amp;nbsp;in revenue per year. &amp;nbsp;  &amp;nbsp;VPIMS&amp;nbsp;handles everything from surgery scheduling, to perioperative documentation, to billing.&amp;nbsp; In addition, a module called Vigilance provides real-time monitoring of every operating room in the facility with multi-view streaming video, patient vital signs, alerts and reminders.&amp;nbsp; It might look like something out of Star Wars, but what it does for patient safety and staff satisfaction is priceless.&amp;nbsp; And did I mention there&#39;s a whole lot of Microsoft technology under the covers? Greater detail on VPIMS is beyond the scope of my Blog.&amp;nbsp; Let me just say if you ever want proof&amp;nbsp;that information technology in medicine saves lives and saves money, look no farther than the very fine work going on at Vanderbilt.&amp;nbsp; And yes, VPIMS has been so successful at Vanderbilt that the medical center is exploring options to commercialize and sell it.&amp;nbsp; And with 95 percent of the market still doing&amp;nbsp;perioperative management on paper, they should have no problem finding customers.&amp;nbsp; Bill Crounse, MD&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Worldwide Health Director&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Microsoft Corporation&amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; PS&amp;nbsp; If you would like information about some of the other presentations at this year&#39;s MSHUG Tech Forum, my good friend and colleauge who serves as&amp;nbsp;Microsoft&#39;s senior technical strategist for our worldwide health group, Roberto Ruggeri, provides play by play coverage on his Healthcare IT Blog. </description>
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	<pubDate>Sun, 26 May 2013 01:13:01 GMT</pubDate>
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