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December 28, 2009

EMR Patient Data Interoperability Between 3 Locations

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Another interesting story from EMRUpdate talking about how one EMR vendor, Medtuity EMR, took 3 locations and tied their EMRs together. However, they didn’t just do one centralized database accessed from each location. Instead, they essentially built patient data interoperability between the 3 locations. Check it out:

We just linked 3 sites in October. The docs described what they wanted, including the speed of a separate SQL Server in each facility. They also had a billing office (as the center or hub). They previously used a single server with Remote Desktop as the means of communicating with a central server. They were not entirely happy with that arrangement and so wanted to embark on a SQL Server in each facility. Additionally, they did not want all encounters synched to all facilities daily. Instead, the 3 offices synch to the billing office once daily. Pt demographics get synched from that hub outward to all offices daily just in case a pt should visit another office.

So the underlying theme was speed– each office has its own server; pt encounters originating there are stored there + at the billing office, but pt demographics are synched to the hub and from there back to all 3 facilities. It’s all automated. If a pt visits a different facility than the original, the demographics are already at that alternate site and so the additional encounters can be synch with a button press to insure contemporaneous info.

What they did not want is to have all encounters stored at each site because there is not enough cross visiting among docs to warrant it, but they did want to be able to transfer encounters quickly when the need arose.

Certainly, this problem is much easier since all 3 locations used the same EMR software. However, it seems like there’s something that can be learned from this story in regards to broader interoperability of EMR software.

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    2 responses to "EMR Patient Data Interoperability Between 3 Locations"

    1. # packets commented on January 1st, 2010:

      Wonder if you might comment on the following article concerning a larger view of “patient data interoperability” and a standard format of such for all? -Thanks http://preview.tinyurl.com/yl2yk58

    2. # John commented on January 1st, 2010:

      The article doesn’t offer many details on patient data portability. However, I agree with its comments that it could be healthcare’s most valuable asset. If it just wasn’t stored in these silos where it can’t be utilized.

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