Saturday, January 29, 2011

This Week in Document Imaging 1/28/2011

- Medsphere announced it won a contract for its OpenVista EHR system from Cooper Green Mercy Hospital of Alabama.
- Meditech announced it won contract from Charlotte Hungerford Hospital of Connecticutt.

- BMC Healthcare of Maryland announced it will use Meditech EHR in hospital and eClinicalWorks in its physician offices.

- HIPAA breach. The St. Vincent Indianapolis Hospital in Indiana had to notify 1,800 patients that their protected health information (PHI) may have been compromised when a hacker successfully persuaded some employees to reveal a login to the hospital’s email system.

- A survey of hospital by Accenture shows EHR installs:

o Epic = 30%

o Cerner = 30%

o Eclipsys (division of Allscripts) = 10%

o GE Centricity = 10%

o McKesson = 10%

o Meditech = 5%

o Siemens = 5%

o Quadramed = 5%

- Children’s Hospital of Boston, MA announced that it acquired:

o eClinicalWorks as its EHR

o Perceptive (Lexmark) imageNOW as its document management system

o Hewlett Packard for its MFPs and printers

o NSi AutoStore as middleware to connect HP MFPs to imageNOW

- Allscripts announced that its EHR connects to Cardiac Science Corp’s automated external defibrillators and diagnostic cardiac monitoring devices.

- In survey published by OpenText of internal medicine trainees, it was revealed that over two-thirds were spending more than 4 hours per day on documentation.

- Cerner announced an install of its Millennium EHR system at Memorial Hermann Healthcare System of Houston, Texas, as well as Lancaster General Health of Lancaster, PA.

- According to The New York Times newspaper, the United States government and Israel’s government worked together to develop the Stuxnet worm that’s blamed for crippling Iran’s program to develop a nuclear weapon. The worm reportedly knocked out one-fifth of Iran’s nuclear centrifuges.

- HIPAA breach: A nurse fired for allegedly looking at the medical records of Tiger Woods is suing for defamation and says he never saw the golf star's files, the Orlando Sentinel reported Friday.

o David Rothenberg seeks 400,000 dollars in damages plus reinstatement and a letter of explanation from officials at Health Central, the hospital where Woods was taken after a November 2009 car crash.

o Hospital officials fired Rothenberg in December of 2009 for looking at the record of Woods three times within 10 minutes on his computer, according to the lawsuit filed Friday.

o Rothenberg, who faces the loss of his nursing license, accused the hospital of defamation and conspiracy to defame plus violating polygraph procedures and causing harm to his reputation.

o Rothenberg argues the evidence against him was circumstantial and that he left his computer terminal unattended and someone else logged in to peep at the golf star's medical records.

- According to a one industry author, in the year 2010, Epic secured EHR contracts from the following hospitals:

o Johns Hopkins

Catholic Health Services of Long Island

New Hanover Regional Medical Center

Ochsner

Moses Cone

Bronson

St. Joseph Michigan – Lakeland

Martin Memorial

Idaho – St. Luke’s

US Coast Guard

Provena

Aurora

University of Mississippi Medical Center

JPS Health Network

SUNY Upstate Medical University

LSU Health

Rochester General

ProHealth Care

Owensboro

Rockford

Sansum

Access Community Health Network

Bassett Healthcare

Stormont-Vail Health Care

Hurley Medical Center

Temple University Health System

Amphia Hospital (Netherlands)

Memorial Healthcare System

Orange Regional Medical Center

Tampa General Hospital

Wenatchee Valley Medical Center

-=Greetings from Sandy Hook=-

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