Hospital beams down 'Star Trek' communicators

Speeding up contact between nurses

By Steve Ranger, 17 August 2006 13:15

NEWS

A hospital trust in Northern Ireland is rolling out wireless voice communicators to replace the jumble of mobile phones, radios and pagers its staff currently use.

Royal Belfast Hospital for Sick Children is using the Vocera devices to make it easier to talk to and find staff. Nurses press a button, Star Trek-style, on the device (pictured below) and then use voice commands to find where other staff are and talk to them.

A nurse shows off the wireless communicator. Photo credit: Royal Belfast Hospitals

The Royal Hospitals IT Manager Paul Duffy told silicon.com: "We have mobile phones, fixed lines, IP telephony, radios, on and off-site pagers and that's just too many. Our goal is to reduce that."

The hospital moved quickly from a trial of the gadgets to a bigger rollout. Duffy said: "We saw immediate benefits and decided we needed to move on it quickly."

The Vocera devices use the hospital's new wireless infrastructure, which is also supporting a number of other applications including digital imaging and electronic prescribing.

silicon.com Public Sector

Get the latest public sector news straight to your inbox. Sign up for the PS newsletter today!

He said: "What you see is just the beginning of the deployment. There are 75 users now and we will get to hundreds of users by December."

The devices will be rolled out to nurses and clinical staff, then anaesthetics and surgeons. Duffy added: "Anyone who carries a pager around or a mobile phone should be carrying one of these and that's thousands."

Comments

There is 1 comment. Join the discussion

  1. 1. anonymous

    Err hang o a minute, hospital staf using mobile phones - how, we are alway's told to turn them off because thay can interfere with critical life support equipment.

    How about some consistency from the nhs - or is the no mobile rule just a way of extorting money from patients who want to make a phone call.

Post your comment

In order to post a comment you need to be registered and logged in.

Log in or create your silicon.com account below

Will not be displayed with your comment

By signing up for this service, you indicate that you agree to our Terms and Conditions and have read and understood our Privacy Policy.

Questions about membership? Find the answers in the Membership FAQ