SHARE
Follow this article on Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Bookmark and Share
Home >> IT Workplace >> Knowledge Management

Hamilton Health Sciences builds home for IT dept

Hamilton Health Sciences builds home for IT dept

By:  Kathleen Lau  On: 17 Sep 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

A 14,000-square-foot hub is a single location that consolidates previously segregated sub groups, from help desk to project management, and is completely open concept designed for collaboration

The Hamilton Health Sciences (HHS)’ technology hub that was launched last week is at once the new home of the hospital’s IT department, as well as a testing ground with industry vendors around innovative health care technologies.

The 14,000-square-foot hub is a single location that consolidates previously segregated sub groups, from help desk to project management, and is completely open concept designed for collaboration, said Mark Farrow, HHS’ chief information officer and assistant vice-president of ICT. “So, when a call came into the help desk, they would have to page people and look for people,” said Farrow. “Now all they have to do is stand up.”

The hub’s staff of 80 manages the help desk, infrastructure, customer service, project management, production support, and Web development. But besides collaboration, enabling innovation was the other primary purpose of the technology hub whereby new healthcare technologies can be built and tested in a real-life environment before being more widely deployed across HHS’ hospital network.

For instance, IBM’s blade technology is being test run to support new kiosk initiatives that will enable a self-serve environment for patients coming into the hospitals for diagnostic imaging for instance. If successful, the kiosks will allow patients to simply swipe a health card and receive directions to where they are to receive their test, be it an x-ray or ultrasound.

Other projects in testing phase are Cisco Canada’s network technology to test “everything from laptops to new devices that we will be using at the [patients’] bedside,” said Farrow. And yet another joint project is with Microsoft Canada where its unified communications technology will be deployed on hardware from HP Canada to iron out possible kinks that may surface in a health care environment.

A million and a half dollars from HHS was put toward building the space, and approximately an additional $400,000 was received from various vendors in the form of hardware, software and services. Besides IBM, Cisco, HP and Microsoft, other vendors include CompuCom Systems, Dell Canada, gluPLUG, NetApp, Nortel, and Panduit Canada.

It took six years to convince the hospital to build the facility, find the space, and collaborate with architects and designers, recalled Farrow, and another year to actually build it. Now, the dual function of the hub – innovation and collaboration – aligns with HHS’ Vision 2010, he said, which is an initiative the hospital embarked upon a year-and-a-half ago “around how we’re bringing technology to the bedside, to the people that need it, and recognizing the mobile nature of healthcare.”

As HHS implemented its new strategy for healthcare, Farrow said “we needed a facility that would help move that innovation along faster.”

Technologies successfully tested in the hub will eventually be extended across the six clinics and cancer centre in HHS’ network. And beyond that, HHS is working to deploy those technologies at other nearby hospitals in its Local Health Integration Network (LHIN).


Sign up for our Newsletters
Tags: network












Print |  Views: 1374   |   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

Related Content

Hydro boosts One network - broadband needed for sharing of diagnostic images
Hydro boosts One network - broadband needed for sharing of diagnostic imagesThe Smart Systems for Health Agency has announced an agreement to use broadband network infrastructure from Hydro One Telecom as the new core for its province-wide system, which hospitals and health clinics can plug into for sharing information electronically. The agency says the new system should both improve health care and help to better protect patient information privacy.
Extracting excellence from IT
Extracting excellence from ITBeing CIO of Trillium Health Centre, it's hardly surprising Wayne Mills is a big supporter­ of ­e-health­. But he wants the e to stand for enabling. A key step in keeping up with the pace of change is for hospitals to cooperate­, he says. "We shouldn't be building hospital­-centric solutions, but looking for ways to work with other hospitals and care providers."
Trillium CIO pushes the power of sharing knowledge
Trillium CIO pushes the power of sharing knowledgeBeing CIO of Trillium Health Centre, it's hardly surprising Wayne Mills is a big supporter of e-health. But he wants the e to stand for enabling. A key step in keeping up with the pace of change is for hospitals to cooperate, he says. "We shouldn't be building hospital-centric solutions, but looking for ways to work with other hospitals and care providers."
The power of IT failure
by joaquim p. menezes - “to err is human, but to
Google’s hottie CIO offers inspiration for ’08
douglas merrill may be the first cio to have his body fat percentage turned into public information. can’t wait to see how google’s search algorithm ind

Comments (0)

No Comments!
Name: (required) eMail: (optional)

Your email address will not appear online and will be used only if the editor wishes to contact you personally for additional comments.