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Ambulance overseer loses patience with paper reports

Ambulance overseer loses patience with paper reports

By:  Greg Meckbach  On: 19 May 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

The Sunnybrook-Osler Center for Prehospital Care used to sift through tons of unwieldy paper reports completed by paramedics. Find out how it scans them into a database so it can get a better feel for how the paramedics are performing

Whenever an ambulance is dispatched in Ontario’s Peel Region, emergency medical technicians fill out an 11 by 17-inch form in triplicate.

In the old days, the third, yellow copy was sent to the Toronto-based Sunnybrook Osler Center for Prehospital Care, which oversees ambulance workers in central Ontario on behalf of the Emergency Health Services Branch of the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care.

But the job of sifting through tens of thousands of paper reports for audits and investigations became a cumbersome paper chase, so SOCPC decided to hire a service bureau, Inofas Integrated Systems Inc., to scan the data on its behalf.

Inofas now scans about 75,000 of the Ambulance Call Reports (ACRs) from Peel Region alone every year and makes the results available to SOCPC, said Inofas president Mike Harrison.

Workers at Inofas use the fi-5650C scanner, made by Tokyo-based Fujitsu, because it can accommodate 11- by 17-inch pages, it renders yellow paper with chicken-scratch into legible reports with black writing on a white background. It can also scan electrocardiogram readouts that are often attached to the ACRs, Harrison said.

“The fact that we can scan that through the Fujitsu scanner without a problem means it’s accommodating the thick and thin (sheets) at the same time.”

Using VirtualReScan (VRS) software from Kofax PLC of Irvine, Calif. and Alchemy document management software from Captaris Inc., the data eventually gets stored into a SQL Server database, in which SOCPC staff can run queries and audit the reports. This is required to ensure the paramedics did their job properly, said Bryan Pett, SOCPC’s director of corporate development.

Pett said SOCPC’s oversight role includes reviewing ACRs, especially in cases where paramedics performed procedures designated by the government as “controlled medical acts.” Under normal circumstances, only medical professional are allowed to perform controlled medical acts (administering medication, for example), but in Ontario, he said, doctors can delegate responsibility for them to paramedics. In instances where paramedics incorrectly perform controlled medical acts, it’s up to SOCPC to do something about it.


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Greg Meckbach Greg Meckbach Greg Meckbach is editor of Network World Canada and has worked for ComputerWorld Canada, Communications & Networking and Computing Canada.
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