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How Sunnybrook secures patient records

How Sunnybrook secures patient records

By:  Greg Meckbach  On: 05 Nov 2009 For: Network World Canada Creator

The Toronto veterans’ and emergency trauma hospital is using single sign-on software from Sentillion to give its doctors and nurses secure access to patient records. Find out what experts say about multi-factor authentication and identity management

As Veterans Week approaches, a major Toronto veterans’ hospital is rolling out a single sign-on service designed to protect patient information.

 

Sunnybrook Health Sciences Center, which employs about 1,500 physicians and 5,000 nurses, uses a combination of single sign-on software and radiofrequency identification (RFID) cards to make it easier for health care workers to access the software they need while ensuring only authorized users can access patient information.

 

The hospital is currently using this at its family practice and its suburban Bayview campus, which was founded in 1948 to treat war veterans and has since expanded to include other services, including a burn unit, regional trauma centre and cancer treatment facility.

 

Sunnybrook’s IT director, Oliver Tsai, said the organization plans to expand its system to workers at its other locations, including the women and babies’ centre at the former Women’s College Hospital and the Holland Orthopaedic and Arthritic Centre.

 

“Our intention is to roll this out to all clinical users,” Tsai said.

 

Health workers use a variety of software at Sunnybrook including EDIS, made by Isoft Group PLC of Banbury, England and Telus Corp.’s Oacis electronic medical record.

 

 

To allow users to sign on to multiple applications, Sunnybrook uses Vergence, made by Sentillion Inc. of Andover, Mass.

 

Vergence includes a desktop software component, Dell server with a Linux operating system and a library of about 500 bridges to third-party applications.

 

Sunnybrook chose Vergence because it allows different departments to choose their own software, meaning at any given work station, medical staff may require access to more than one application and do not want to lose time logging in more than once.

 

“A user walks up, taps their ID badge on the RFID reader, types in their password and that logs them in the system and all the applications they’re authorized to use,” Tsai said. “If they leave that PC the sensor identifies they left the PC and automatically logs them out of all applications.”

 

He added Sunnybrook used fingerprint readers in a trial but decided to authenticate using RFID cards instead because the hospital had problems with the readers when oil built up on them.


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Greg Meckbach Greg Meckbach Greg Meckbach is editor of Network World Canada and has worked for ComputerWorld Canada, Communications & Networking and Computing Canada.

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