medical records medicine
University of Miami School of Medicine Uses Infrared Technology to Improve Efficiency and Satisfaction Levels
White Paper With nationally recognized medical facilities and the largest single hospital in the country, The University of Miami School of Medicine needed a well planned and tactfully executed program to effectively integrate the use of handheld PDAs into... [03 Jul 2008]
Doctors Boost Patient Load and Still Get Home for Dinner With Microsoft-Based System
White Paper The Michigan Knee and Shoulder Institute, of Auburn Hills, Michigan, is a leading sports-medicine practice in the region, staffed by two board-certified orthopedic surgeons. The institute found the features it sought in gloEMR, an electronic... [30 Apr 2008]
Cisco Solutions Bring Traditional Medicine Into the Future in China
White Paper The China Academy of Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM), Guang An Men Hospital (including the Second institute of Clinical Medicine and the Institute of Ophthalmology) was founded in 1955. Paper based records were hard to search, and physically... [11 Jan 2008]
Medical Practice Improves Efficiency, Cuts Costs With Lexmark Solution
White Paper Central Internal Medicine, a successful medical practice located in Lexington, Ky.consists of five participating partners, 23 full-time employees and thousands of patients. Central Internal Medicine consolidated its output devices and replaces... [24 May 2007]
Taskforce aims to end NHS care records row
News The taskforce will be chaired by Harry Clayton, national director for patients and the public at the Department of Health, and members will include representatives from the British Medical Association, the College of Emergency Medicine, the Royal... [20 Jul 2006]
Is online home help the answer to NHS cash crisis?
News Dr Mike Bainbridge, a clinical architect for the NHS Connecting for Health (CfH) programme, said: "Medicine in the 21st century is not quite there yet. We have got patients contributing [to health records] but if that's in the house we need to know... [22 Jun 2006]
Peter Cochrane's Uncommon Sense: A sea of bits
Comment To date IT has been to the world of medicine, transport, technology, food and mass production what electricity has been to IT. It will also be possible to record every conversation and action through personal and wearable devices, not to mention... [20 Oct 2004]
£6bn NHS IT overhaul about 'automation not innovation'
News Technology such as wireless tagging of patients, blood plasma packs and medicine bottles - which reduces medical errors - should be welcomed with open arms by medical staff. Smaller IT suppliers are finding themselves being dropped by their... [16 Sep 2004]
University laptop theft leaves patients exposed to ID theft
News Dr Priscilla I Figueroa, director of the university's division of transfusion medicine, said in the statement: "We deeply regret any inconvenience this incident may cause our blood donors. Widespread use of laptops has presented an increasing risk... [11 Jun 2004]
The College of Veterinary Medicine at North Carolina State University
White Paper The Veterinary Teaching Hospital at North Carolina State University, in Raleigh, NC, has designed the first medical records system of its kind in the veterinary world using Axiant. The medical records system allows hundreds of users to tap into... [02 Mar 2004]
Mobile Medicine
White Paper With the ever-increasing usage of wireless technology, more and more health care providers are beginning to transfer patient communications and medical records via wireless communication devices because they realize it can streamline everyday... [25 Feb 2004]
Make Healthcare Work with Wireless LANs
White Paper As Healthcare Organizations have come under increasing pressure to reduce costs and provide better quality service, many providers have invested in sophisticated, enabling information technologies to streamline the administration and practice of... [25 Feb 2004]
Peter Cochrane’s Uncommon Sense: Medical records
Comment As a result medicine remains an experience-, folk lore- and anecdote-dominated sector. Because of the nature of medical records it is impossible to correlate experiences, patient histories, treatment regimes and outcomes in anything but small and... [24 Jul 2003]
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