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Credit Valley Hospital cures tech pains with IP upgrade

Credit Valley Hospital cures tech pains with IP upgrade

By:  Lisa Williams  On: 07 Nov 2007 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Mississauga, Ont.-based Credit Valley Hospital embarked on a $300-million expansion program that saw the hospital doubling its size. That also meant increased demand on the IT department for enhanced communication services. How the hospital is alleviating some of its IT department's woes.

In an attempt to address increased communication needs resulting from a massive expansion project, Credit Valley Hospital turned to technology to fill a widening IT personnel gap.

The Mississauga, Ont.-based hospital has implemented a single-vendor communications system to enhance Credit Valley's voice and data systems, according to Leigh Popov, the hospital's manager for technical infrastructure and planning.

"If you're getting more demands for communication but you're not getting anymore staff, then you have to be able to do more with less," Popov said. "You have to simplify."

Credit Valley recently embarked on a $300-million expansion program that doubled the hospital's size and capacity. Currently, the hospital's IT department supports the communication needs of 2,500 employees and over 300 physicians in two locations.

To support that growing requirement, Credit Valley has implemented Nortel's communications technology, which includes an IP-based Ethernet core and local area network (LAN), said Popov.

"On top of that sits a wireless network which is also a Nortel product...it is designed and made to work well with our LAN, and is used to enable wireless communications within the whole campus and within any Credit Valley facility," he added.

The hospital is also using Nortel's voice systems, including wireless handsets, and three private exchange (PBX) systems, which are being used as call servers, Popov added.

He noted the servers are all completely VoIP-enabled, but run in hybrid modes.

"This means they will do both traditional TDM (time-division multiplexing) and VoIP," Popov explained. "We do that for purposes of redundancy and reliability."

Overall, the system allowed the hospital to improve the quality and reliability of its communications services, while reducing network complexity and costs, according to Popov.

Employee efficiency also improved. "Our clinicians absolutely depend on the mobility solution we put in place based on Nortel wireless LAN and voice handsets," he said. "We're helping them be more efficient and productive."

He added that the integrated communications system enabled the IT department to provide a better level of service, and reduce operating costs.

"We're saving $1,500 a month on T1 trunks between the two facilities, but that's just a small fraction of what we're actually saving," he explained. "We just added 700 new sets, more than 800 new directory numbers, and 300,000 square feet of facility space, and we haven't had to add even one more voice analyst or technician."

A top-of-mind issue for the hospital is the protection and security of patient information, for which Popov said they have a multi-layered approach.


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Lisa Williams Lisa Williams is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.
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