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2.
Hosp Health Netw ; 87(10): 22-3, 2, 2013 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24303630

ABSTRACT

Any health care provider that's not taking advantange of the many advances in audiovisual tools to connect with patients is woefully behind the curve, experts warn. Here's what some hospitals are up to in both rural communities and urban areas.


Subject(s)
Hospital Shared Services/trends , Rural Health Services/trends , Telemedicine/trends , Urban Health Services/trends , Hospital Shared Services/methods , Hospital Shared Services/organization & administration , Medically Underserved Area , Organizational Case Studies , Telemedicine/methods , Telemedicine/organization & administration , Time Factors , United States
5.
BMC Health Serv Res ; 12: 64, 2012 Mar 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22420301

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Telepathology, which is an emerging form of telemedicine in Canada, is defined as the electronic transmission of pathological images, usually derived from microscopes, from one location to another. There are various applications of telepathology, including case referral for an expert opinion, provision of an emergency service in the absence of a resident pathologist, and education. Until now, there has been relatively little use of telepathology for core diagnostic services in the absence of a local pathologist, but this practice is likely to increase in the future. The Laval University Integrated Health Network is in the process of deploying a telepathology system, primarily to provide an intraoperative frozen section service to small hospitals in sparsely populated areas which are experiencing a severe shortage of on-site pathologists. The telepathology project involves 17 hospitals located in five regions of eastern Quebec, Canada. This paper describes the study protocol that will be used to evaluate the benefits associated with the project. METHODS/DESIGN: A panel of experts was first assembled by Canada Health Infoway to agree on a set of benefits indicators that could be applied to all telepathology projects across Canada. Using the set of indicators as an input, we have developed a three-step study protocol. First, a survey questionnaire will be distributed to appraise the way pathologists, pathology technologists and surgeons perceive the telepathology system and its impacts. Second, a series of semi-structured interviews will be conducted with project leaders and telepathology users at sites that are representative of all the hospitals in the Laval University Integrated Health Network. The overall aim is to better understand the expected and unexpected effects of telepathology on health care professionals and patients as well as on the regional organization and delivery of care services. Finally, a pre-post design using secondary data is proposed to evaluate a wide array of tangible benefits to the patients, the health care providers, the hospitals, and the region as a whole. DISCUSSION: The Laval University Integrated Health Network's telepathology project is expected to yield positive and significant results that are relevant internationally. Our findings will provide valuable information on the nature and extent of benefits associated with telepathology systems intended to provide an intraoperative frozen section service to remote hospitals experiencing a shortage of specialists.


Subject(s)
Computer Communication Networks/organization & administration , Hospital Shared Services/organization & administration , Telepathology/organization & administration , Computer Communication Networks/trends , Frozen Sections , Hospital Shared Services/trends , Humans , Medically Underserved Area , Organizational Case Studies , Program Evaluation , Quebec , Telepathology/trends
8.
Mod Healthc ; 37(28): 6-7, 16, 1, 2007 Jul 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17821842

ABSTRACT

While a legal ruling in 2000 put a damper on joint operating agreements, hospital officials are again testing the waters. Systems or hospitals in Georgia, Maine, New York and Wisconsin are all looking at some kind of cooperation. "There are a lot more conversations occurring again between organizations, between health systems," says William Petasnick, left. "Some of this is a reflection of times changing again."


Subject(s)
Hospital Shared Services/trends , Multi-Institutional Systems/trends , Organizational Affiliation/trends , Antitrust Laws , Cooperative Behavior , Economic Competition , Health Facility Merger , Hospital Shared Services/legislation & jurisprudence , Multi-Institutional Systems/legislation & jurisprudence , Organizational Affiliation/legislation & jurisprudence , United States
14.
Health Care Manage Rev ; 27(2): 33-49, 2002.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11985290

ABSTRACT

In past years, many SHAs formed in local urban markets to better compete for managed care contracts. In response to 1990s forces, these SHAs appear to have adapted product, production, and selling orientations to their markets, aimed at large institutional purchasers of health care. However, health care markets have evolved differently than anticipated. SHAs and their hospitals should now adopt the marketing orientation and focus more on patients and enrollees.


Subject(s)
Health Care Sector/trends , Multi-Institutional Systems/organization & administration , Organizational Affiliation/trends , Consumer Behavior , Economic Competition/trends , Health Care Sector/statistics & numerical data , Health Facility Merger/statistics & numerical data , Health Facility Merger/trends , Health Services Research , Hospital Shared Services/organization & administration , Hospital Shared Services/statistics & numerical data , Hospital Shared Services/trends , Hospitals, Urban/organization & administration , Hospitals, Urban/statistics & numerical data , Hospitals, Urban/trends , Managed Care Programs/trends , Marketing of Health Services/methods , Marketing of Health Services/trends , Multi-Institutional Systems/statistics & numerical data , Multi-Institutional Systems/trends , United States
15.
Radiologe ; 42(2): 71-81, 2002 Feb.
Article in German | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11963251

ABSTRACT

Several hospitals in northern Hessen, not having their own radiology departments, want to run CT-scanners with the goal of improving medical quality. They requested co-operation from the Radiological Institute in the Hardtwaldklinik I in Bad Zwesten. Therefore a teleradiological network was developed, which enables the exchange of radiological-images and -reports between 19 hospitals today. An elementary requirement for this co-operation is an efficient and functional computer infrastructure and verified co-operation contracts. The conception, structure and development of the program, as well as associated difficulties are presented and discussed from different perspectives in the light of the controversy among experts. The results, experiences and benefits gained in four years, in which the teleradiological network of northern Hessen has been in place, demonstrate the importance and possibilities of teleradiology as an element of telemedicine. Teleradiology/telediagnostics improves the quality of patient care in smaller hospitals located in less-populated areas and present possibilities to optimize and integrate health care structures, taking economic considerations into account.


Subject(s)
Computer Communication Networks/trends , Hospital Shared Services/trends , Radiology Information Systems/trends , Teleradiology/trends , Forecasting , Germany , Humans , Patient Care Team/trends , Remote Consultation/trends
16.
Radiologe ; 42(2): 82-6, 2002 Feb.
Article in German | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11963252

ABSTRACT

PROBLEM: Health care delivery in Germany has to face severe challenges that will lead to a closer integration of services for in- and out-patients. University hospitals play an important role due to their activities in research, education and health care delivery. They are requested to promote and evaluate new means and ways for health care delivery. METHODS: The Institute of Clinical Radiology at the University Hospital of the Ludwig-Maximilians-University started teleradiological services for hospitals and general practices in January 1999 in the framework of the "Imaging services--teleradiological center of excellence". Legal, technical and organizational prerequisites were analyzed. RESULTS: Networks between university hospitals and general practices are not likely to solve all future problems. They will, however, increase the availability of the knowledge of experts even in rural areas and contribute to a quality ensured health care at the patients home. Future developments may lead to international co-operations and such services may be available to patients abroad. CONCLUSION: Legal, technical and organizational obstacles have to be overcome to create a framework for high quality telemedical applications. University hospitals will play an important role in promoting and evaluating teleradiological services.


Subject(s)
Hospital Shared Services/trends , Hospitals, University/trends , Outpatient Clinics, Hospital/trends , Radiology Department, Hospital/trends , Teleradiology/trends , Delivery of Health Care/trends , Forecasting , Germany , Humans , National Health Programs/trends , Patient Care Team/trends , Quality Assurance, Health Care/trends , Remote Consultation/trends
17.
Radiologe ; 42(2): 87-93, 2002 Feb.
Article in German | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11963253

ABSTRACT

The CHILI teleradiology network has more than 60 installations in Germany and the USA. Radiological images and cardiological multiframe series are exchanged in clinical routine. This article investigates in what way and how often the system is used. This is done by means of accounting files that are produced automatically by the system. User functions, transmission protocols, data quantity, frequencies and time of data transmission and teleconferences are evaluated and discussed in this paper. Different application scenarios have been identified and are described and analyzed as well. An important result is, that the system is not merely an emergency system. Instead, it is used in daily routine as a multifunctional, multimodality workstation with advanced features for teleradiology and telecardiology.


Subject(s)
Computer Communication Networks/trends , Radiology Information Systems/trends , Teleradiology/trends , Forecasting , Germany , Hospital Shared Services/trends , Humans , Microcomputers , Patient Care Team/trends , Remote Consultation/trends , Software , Telecommunications/trends
19.
Psychiatr Serv ; 48(6): 838-9, 1997 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9175197

ABSTRACT

The David Grant Medical Center at Travis Air Force Base in California is the site of a collaboration between the U.S. Air Force, the Department of Veterans Affairs, and the School of Medicine of the University of California, Davis, which was begun in 1994 to assure optimum use of resources and provide broader educational experiences to residents and students. The three systems have been integrated most fully on an inpatient mental health unit. The authors describe the history and development of the collaboration, focusing on how the model has helped the three organizations address clinical, institutional, and educational needs.


Subject(s)
Education, Medical/trends , Hospitals, Military/organization & administration , Hospitals, University/organization & administration , Hospitals, Veterans/organization & administration , Internship and Residency/organization & administration , Psychiatric Department, Hospital/organization & administration , Psychiatry/education , California , Forecasting , Hospital Bed Capacity , Hospital Shared Services/trends , Humans , Internship and Residency/trends , Length of Stay/trends , Patient Admission/trends
20.
Clin Lab Sci ; 8(4): 197-203, 1995.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10155663

ABSTRACT

The 1990s has become a time when fewer employees are producing more work than ever for increasingly consolidated industries. Here's what that means in the american health care system: hospital networks, sharing laboratory services, contracting for outside services, and restructuring staffs.


Subject(s)
Cost Control , Financial Management, Hospital/trends , Laboratories, Hospital/trends , Forecasting , Hospital Restructuring , Hospital Shared Services/trends , Laboratories, Hospital/organization & administration , Managed Care Programs , Models, Organizational , Organizational Innovation , United States
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