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Manitoba teams with IBM for EHR system

Manitoba teams with IBM for EHR system

By:  Rafael Ruffolo  On: 17 Dec 2009 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

The province hopes its $22.5-million EHR project will improve the efficiency and quality of patient care. Find out why Manitoba decided to go the pre-packaged software route

The Government of Manitoba is undertaking a $22.5-million project to create an electronic health-care records system. As opposed to building the system from scratch, the province is relying on IBM Corp. to implement an EHR software package from dbMotion Ltd.

 

The dbMotion Solution gives doctors and nurses secure, real-time access to integrated clinical information, which might include the type of medications a patient is using or a historical list of the medical tests they’ve been subjected to. Currently, Manitoba’s medical records are housed on a variety of systems that are unable to interact with each other.

 

The system’s first phase launch is planned for the end of 2010 and will deliver “view capability” to health-care professionals working in select clinics and emergency rooms, according to Rick Guerard, the project director in charge at Manitoba.

 

For Roger Girard, the CIO at Manitoba eHealth, the decision to buy commercial, off-the-shelf software represents standard practice at the province, with IBM meeting about 80 per cent of the company’s requirements right out of the box.

 

He added that the project is not going to be completed overnight, as the system will eventually grow into a broad platform that even includes patient consultant reports.

 

“We’re starting out with labs and drugs and will eventually broaden out to other things,” said Girard. “The system will improve safety, improve clinical decision-making, and will result in fewer errors in the system, which are encountered today because of information not being available at the point of care.”

 

In addition to rolling out the first phase and working with the province to get staff ready to use the system, IBM’s agreement also covers a second phase deployment. Giovanni Vatieri, a partner specializing in health care for IBM’s Global Business Services group, expects a second release in 2011 to expand access to more clinics and allow for sharing between EHR and other medical records.

 


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Rafael Ruffolo Rafael Ruffolo was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2006 to 2011. He was the winner of a Kenneth R. Wilson award for business journalism in 2009.

Comments (1)

mark bryski
by mark bryski 12/18/2009 6:55:00 PM

Too bad Ontario hasn't taken this approach. It would have saved a significant portion of the $1 billion wasted. The funny thing is, Ontario can probably self-finance this approach by scrapping the managed/private network which costing them $70 million per year while waiting for an EHR application and database.

Mark Bryski

President

Klinix Software

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