Bill Crounse - Talking hospital tech with CIO of Overlake Hospital
- Posted: Aug 12, 2005 at 3:30 PM
- 37,448 Views
- 24 Comments
Loading User Information from Channel 9
Something went wrong getting user information from Channel 9
Loading User Information from MSDN
Something went wrong getting user information from MSDN
Loading Visual Studio Achievements
Something went wrong getting the Visual Studio Achievements
Right click “Save as…”
Comments have been closed since this content was published more than 30 days ago, but if you'd like to continue the conversation,
please create a new thread in our Forums,
or
Contact Us and let us know.
Follow the Discussion
Oops, something didn't work.
What does this mean?
Following an item on Channel 9 allows you to watch for new content and comments that you are interested in. You need to be signed in to Channel 9 to use this feature.What does this mean?
Following an item on Channel 9 allows you to watch for new content and comments that you are interested in and view them all on your notifications page.sign up for email notifications?
Keep the videos coming. This one has helped accellerate an unusually slow Friday afternoon.
Great questions from Robert. They hit some areas that are especially important, like HIPPA, privacy, efficiency and others.
My only criticism is Robert's nervous laughter. It was quite loud and out of place in this environment. Perhaps it was because of the microphone placement. It was distracting. I would recommend trying to tone that down.
Great video, my favorite on Channel 9. You should interview more CIO's. They are sometimes the most interesting subjects. How about Microsoft's CIO? Boeing? Washington Mutual? All are big users of Microsoft technology. Go for it!
It's also good that Robert kept the loud laughter down (I'm assuming it's because he was in a hospital with serious guys in suits).
It is so critical to have things working that I can't even conceive Linux running on embedded device of a doctor.
Laughter is the best medicine
Seeing them carrying around those Tablet PC's makes me wish I could afford one for when I do the 'sales/analysis' part of my job. Sure would be easier than lugging around reams of paper and a laptop.
And I like Scoble's laugh, it lets me know when he is delighted about something. I don't want a stone faced interviewer at all.
It's quite a different tablet world for that hospital for Microsoft employees.
revenuetechnology is not the real answer.The big issue was the speed of the wireless network and I appreciated that he had not been informed what to say and the rebuff of the idea that smart clients were the answer, he might not have seen the value in them, but gave an honest answer that increased speeds were what mattered. Scobleizer must have felt that, I've never seen that in a Channel 9 interview, going against the Microsoft vision.
I strongly believe that more outsiders, not even with tertiary relation to Microsoft, should be interviewed. Obviously along side Microsoft representatives to give both sides of the story, but the whole life and death, budget and no-nonsense attitudes of the medics opened up in this video a genuine view of the real world.
Anyway I think its great to see some "REAL WORLD" deployment of what we all love and work on day in day out... Amazing how what we REALLY do affect people's lives, keep it up MSFT!
Abou 20 mins in there is mention of an SDk specific for healthcare? Or did I mis-understand? Any chance of a link?
<edit>
Even more interesting stuff later on - as we charge for our software on the model mentioned - on a per month basis, rather than a hefty fee. Interesting to see that being looked for.
I guess the UK and US health markets are very different though. here a small company would be unlikely to be writing the kind of software you are talking about for hospitals or general practice, as almost all of that is part of the monolithic NHS. There is currently a MASSIVE project going on to upgrade the NHS medical systems, using .NET. Maybe you could get some info on that here?
I haven't watched the video yet, but I'm going to. I just wanted to comment on this.
This is the scariest f'ing thing to do when you are developing a medical record/research system. I'm creating a cancer research system for UW/SCCA now and my biggest fear is that a doc will try to use our system to treat patients. We want them to use our system for quality of care research (e.g. how are my patients that are taking drug x doing? How efficient is this diagnostic technique at detecting this type of cancer) and analytical research ( e.g. what type of people are more likely to get this type of cancer, what types of treatments are more effective with this type of cancer). But I'm not sure we want to try and replace the electronic medical record system. We sure as heck don't want to try and suggest diagnoses to the docs. We are planning on using Baysean inferences, with a little bit of genetic programming, to increase the quality of the queries the docs want to run. Classifying the results into "good data", "Ok data", and "you should review this before you use it data.".
I can't believe the docs would go for letting a computer make a diagnosis for them. Is the system just suggesting possible diagnoses or is it making the diagnosis for the docs?
edit: I wanted to add that the reason we hope the docs aren't making a diagnosis from our application is that we don't think we can gather as much data as the patients paper chart has in it. We don't want the docs to make treatment decisions based on incomplete data. Trying to get data out of decades old, proprietary systems is ...hard.
'nother edit: One question. How is the tablet program at Swedish MC doing? I remember reading a case study on their EMR at the MS site a while back. Somebody from MS approached the SCCA about doing a Tablet pilot project. But their proposal was pretty lame, they didn't really want to push the envelope and we needed them too. I'm not sure if we took them up on their offer or not. The last time we talked to someone about Tablet PC data entry for our app was in NYC, and it wasn't an MS presentation. It was a lame partner who showed us a lame ink text box. That was about 2 years ago though.
Barbara Duck
Ducknet Services
Agree the nervous laughter seemed a little annoying but I didn't do the interview so who am I to judge.
Excellent content!!!
The device is a Vocera badge (VoIP phone) and one of the commands is "Where is Kent" and it will tell you the closest access point to where that person is.
We are about to deploy Cisco's new RFID tracking system that tracks 802.11 b/d devices. So from any browser with the user appropriate authority you can see where any device is within about 10 feet.
Remove this comment
Remove this thread
close