SHARE
Follow this article on Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Bookmark and Share
Home >> Government >> Human Resources

B.C. government sets $148M EHR project in motion

B.C. government sets $148M EHR project in motion

By:  Kathleen Lau  On: 17 Apr 2007 For: ITWorldCanada.com Creator
 

The government of British Columbia has set in motion a province-wide $148-million health-care initiative that aims to reduce wait times for medical procedures, cut costs by reducing unnecessary re-tests, and provide medical practitioners with faster access to patient information

COMMENT ON THIS ARTICLE

The government of British Columbia has set in motion a province-wide $148-million health-care initiative that aims to reduce wait times for medical procedures, cut costs by reducing unnecessary re-tests, and provide medical practitioners with faster access to patient information.

These benefits are courtesy of an electronic health-care system that will store patient medical records and laboratory test results so they can be shared among health-care professionals across the province.

The new setup will be based on Solaris 10 architecture and operating system by Burnaby, Vancouver-based Sun Microsystems of Canada. It will be created and deployed by Sun, in tandem with MedPlus, First Consulting Group (FCG), CGI Group, and Telus.

While individual hospitals and health regions in the province currently have medical systems that give access to patient data, they don't allow for information sharing, says Andy Canham, president of Sun Microsystems of Canada Inc.

"If you were in Victoria and went to Vancouver and suddenly needed access to medical care, those records aren't necessarily available today," he says.

The system has two components: the Provincial Laboratory Information Solution (PLIS) and the interoperable Electronic Health Record (iEHR) systems.

PLIS will provide authorized clinicians across the province with electronic access to laboratory tests and results from public and private laboratory service providers. iEHR, on the other hand, will provide health-care workers access to patient medical records and other clinical data from pharmacies, laboratories and diagnostic imaging systems.

Sun and FCG will develop and implement iEHR using FCG's FirstGateways Suite, a family of products that integrate clinical and business data.

PLIS will be designed and implemented by MedPlus, a developer and integrator of clinical connectivity and health-care data management tools.

In addition, Sun will develop the underlying identity and access management tool for both PLIS and iEHR, using Sun Java Identity Management Suite, to ensure medical information is managed according to role-based access.

Post-implementation, CGI will manage the application, and provide software support and coordinate software upgrades. Telus will host patient laboratory information on data centres in British Columbia, and back up facilities in Alberta.

The health system, says Canham, will be scalable to "easily and fully support all citizens in British Columbia."

But besides scalability, a key piece of the architecture is interoperability, which will facilitate data flow between applications, he says. "Users can integrate existing applications that currently exist in the health environment in British Columbia, plus new applications – and provide a single view of patient data and history."


Sign up for our Newsletters

 












Print |  Views: 2653   |   Rating:offoffoffoffoff  (0 votes)
Rate this article on a scale of
1 to 5 stars,5 being the best.




Kathleen Lau Kathleen Lau was a senior writer with ITWorldCanada.com and ComputerWorld Canada from December 2006 to August 2011.In her role as senior writer, she covered broadly technology news and issues r... more

Recent Canadian IT Jobs




Related Content

B.C. Health Ministry eyes shared services for health authorities
B.C. Health Ministry eyes shared services for health authoritiesBritish Columbia's Ministry of Health is creating a Health Authority Shared Services organization tasked to pursue non-clinical shared services initiatives among the province's health authorities. Health Minister George Abbott cited achieving cost reduction and resource optimization as the rationale for the undertaking.
Two Canadians recognized for innovation by CIPA
Two Canadians recognized for innovation by CIPAThe main behind a pan-Canadian electronic health record and the head of a local industry association are getting honoured by their peers at an event to be held later this month.
Six steps to contain a virus
Six steps to contain a virusCanada Health Infoway Inc. is working with the country's 13 provinces and territories to integrate six applications, or key modules, into one portal for public health surveillance and information management. Jeffrey Betts, a business development manager for systems integrator IBM Canada Ltd., offers a walkthrough of the various components:
eHealth Ontario appoints Sarah Kramer prez, CEO
ehealth ontario appointed last week a new president and ceo, sarah kramer.she assumed her duties this week. key priorities of the agency include creating a diabetes registry, establishing an e-prescribing system, and developing an e-health portal.kramer previously held the position of vice-president and cio of cancer care ontario, and cio for the nova scotia department of heal
The power of IT failure
by joaquim p. menezes - “to err is human, but to
Ashoka gets $2.5-million software grant
microsoft corp. has announced it is giving a software grant worth $2.5 million to an american non-profit group, ashoka.arlington, va.-based ashoka plans to use the grant to distribute “entrepreneur’s tool kits” to 30 different offices.asoka has a network of more than 2,000 ashoka fellows working in economic development, environment, health and education.in canada, as
blog comments powered by Disqus