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From paper trail to patient care

From paper trail to patient care

By:  Rosie Lombardi  On: 18 Aug 2005 For: IT World Canada Creator

Hospitals should take care of patients, not paper. For many hospitals, however, the manual processes involved in managing the inventory of instruments and tracking them through sterilization cycles are prone to error and can lead to cross-infections.

Hospitals should take care of patients, not paper.

For many hospitals, however, the manual processes involved in managing the inventory of instruments and tracking them through sterilization cycles are prone to error and can lead to cross-infections.

Bent on improving patient care and minimizing the risk of infection, The Ottawa Hospital (TOH) implemented an instrument tracking system dubbed, Alex Gold, to automate its processes across its three campuses, says Lynne Trott, director of logistical services at TOH. Indiana-based software firm TGX Medical Systems Inc developed the system.

In the past, instrument tracking was done manually on sheets and binders, explains Trott. Inaccuracies resulted from reliance on time-pressured hospital staff to maintain records that are often not updated on a regular basis, even as new instruments were brought in.

Requests by the OR department to locate instruments used on a specific patient meant spending a lot of time chasing the paper trail.

Sterilization technicians typically assemble sets of instruments on a tray based on the type of procedure being performed on patients. Once used, the instruments are sent to a decontamination area to be cleaned, sterilized, reassembled into sets, and then sent to sterile storage areas for reuse.

Lack of integrated information was a major issue. “We couldn’t guarantee we had accurate information on which tray was used for a specific patient. With Alex, we can now tie that to patient information,” says Trott.

The implementation project required a great deal of initial effort. It took about a year to fully implement the system across TOH’s three campuses, says Trott. The hospital needed to do a full inventory of instruments first, then load this information onto the database, along with cleaning and sterilization instructions for each instrument – a major task, as there are thousands of manufacturers with different instructions.

The instruments also needed to be bar-coded - with special strips that can withstand the heat and chemicals of sterilization - so they could be scanned and recorded within the system at every step of the cycle.

Last but not least, TOH needed to develop and execute a training program for 150 sterilization technicians.

TOH’s implementation was unique, as it was one of the first multi-site implementations of the system. But the average installation requires about two months, says Michael Good, CEO of TGX Medical Systems. “We did a lot of custom work at TOH beyond what’s in the packaged product, and we also did some design changes internally,” he says.

Alex was worth the effort, says Trott, as the ability to manage inventory and costs of instrumentation is important. “In the past, hospitals have not been able to manage that as an asset. In most cases, they don’t know the total inventory or the total dollar value of instruments. There’s no tool for budgeting or tracking maintenance costs.”


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Rosie Lombardi Rosie Lombardi 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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