The Top 10 Questions Nurses & Other Clinicians Need to Ask About Device Integration » (227.58 KB)
When your hospital suggests it’s time for a device integration plan—whether for the first time or to replace an existing system—make sure you’re part of the conversation and ask the following questions
The Top 10 Questions IT Needs to Ask Before Implementing Device Integration » (266.76 KB)
Medical device integration benefits hospitals by increasing productivity. Real-time data entry reduces charting errors, and saves nurses up to 3 hours a day of administrative time, freeing them up for more patient care. The challenge lies in choosing the right system to meet your objectives, one that provides complete integration seamlessly. The first step is clarifying what you need and comparing that against what your vendors can provide.
The Top 10 Questions Every Hospital Executive Needs to Ask Before Implementing Device Integration » (228.32 KB)
When it’s time to purchase a device integration system, make sure the one you choose enhances not only the current workflow and the existing infrastructure, but the data you need. The following questions can help you choose the right vendor with the right product.
The Top 10 Questions Every Biomed Engineer Needs to Ask Before Implementing Device Integration » (249.69 KB)
Biomedical engineers face several challenges in their daily work, especially with communication between device pairings: device and network, patient and device, nurse and device. You want a smooth device integration solution that works for all possible interfaces and, while you have a reputation for problem solving, you shouldn’t have to problem solve something that is supposed to make your life easier. So here are some important questions to ask potential integration vendors up front—so you encounter fewer problems later.
Medical Device Connectivity: Is Waiting Worth the Risk? » (951.99 KB)
White paper describing how medical device connectivity is a proven technology that can save nursing time, positively impact the accuracy and timeliness of documentation, and improve overall patient care and safety.
Medical Device Connectivity Vendor-Neutral, Open Architecture » (273.37 KB)
White paper describing the types of medical device connectivity and how the vendor neutral approach minimizes points of integration, provides the greatest flexiblity and scalability for hospitals and ensures that all parameters, from all devices can be delivered to the patients record.
Enterprise Medical Device Connectivity » (988.74 KB)
White paper describes how an enterprise approach to connectivity meets hospitals goals from clinical, to technical, to management.
Connected Care: Consider the options carefully » (265.85 KB)
While hospitals have always been challenging environments, the current health care environment gives new meaning to the word “challenging.” Sicker patients and increased documentation requirements mean more intense nursing workloads at a time when nurses are in short supply to begin with and the pressure for financial accountability has never been higher.
Patient Centric Connectivity » (268.49 KB)
Since their inception, clinical documentation applications such as electronic medical records (EMRs) have relied on data tagged with a location-based identifier. However, the 2011 Joint Commission's National Patient Safety Goal of identifying patients, not just their assumed location, now makes patient identification an even more essential component of device connectivity solutions.
Meaningful Use and Medical Device Integration » (272.58 KB)
White paper examining the ARRA and its definition of “meaningful use.” Then defining the basic problem that hospitals must confront to acquire ARRA-related reimbursement under the HITECH provision. Finally, this paper examines how deploying medical device integration will help hospitals achieve ARRA meaningful use objectives.

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