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Dictation done right: access from anywhere with ASP

Dictation done right: access from anywhere with ASP

By:  Briony Smith  On: 11 Sep 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Find out how a hospital is providing remote access to health information

The healthcare sector in Canada continues to catch up, technology-wise, as exemplified by the Region of Waterloo and Wellington County’s use of AnyWare Group’s access management software and Web portals to improve remote working and improve access to medical transcription services.

Cambridge Memorial Hospital’s IT department bears the burden of many an IT department in the health sector in that it has only a small team to support a large, complex infrastructure (and one that is supporting critical care itself).

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Plus, the team had to take care of the many healthcare workers required remote access to the hospital’s records and Health Information System (HIS), including other facilities, physicians with privileges at that hospital, specialists from the major cities, and medical personnel out in the field. This was done primarily through a jerry-rigged combination of dial-up and VPN access that worked mainly for the in-house staff, but left something to be desired when it came to jacking in remotely.

“There was demand from external physicians to access us from their clinics—they needed more efficient service ,” said Pilar Turcotte, the hospital’s network administrator. “Their numbers were getting bigger and bigger, and it was just getting crazy. A great deal of the medical community are also Mac users, and Mac support is very different, so to support the VPN and a Mac client was difficult.”

Cambridge knew it was time to make a change, and were intrigued when the Saint John, New Brunswick-based AnyWare Group came calling. The role-oriented access management (ROAM) vendor was indeed a good fit. Said Turcotte: “They used a Web interface that could have a look and feel very similar to ours, and the security was there, too.”

Chris Cummins, vice-president of sales with AnyWare Group, said, “Web interfaces work well because of the sheer number of applications and legacy systems in hospitals—it’s much easier to tie everything into one platform.”

Ease-of-use was a must-have for the hospital, as medical staffers are notoriously averse to change. The interface was easily customizable—a simple Web page would house links that would take users to the application or action or health record they needed. “They might not be familiar with some applications,” said Turcotte, “But, of course, over 99 per cent of them have used a browser before!”

The other big selling point was AnyWare’s model as a managed service provider. “This way, we don’t own or support the hardware, and the hospital doesn’t have to develop or maintain anything. They give ongoing support, and it remains with them,” Turcotte said.


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Briony Smith Briony Smith 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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