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SAP quickens the pulse of health-care organization

SAP quickens the pulse of health-care organization

By:  Briony Smith  On: 03 Sep 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Plexxus, which handles back-office functions for 12 Ontario hospitals, is dealing with its legacy IT infrastructure by embarking on an enterprise resource planing project. Inside the RFP process

Now, Plexxus will be teaming up with a partner and setting out on the actual implementation of the first module—supply chain management. One project that will form a large part of the supply chain management push is a new “procure-to-pay” system that will pull in current product pricing, as well as track usage, current contents, and expiry dates to make procurement cheaper and more effective. This project should take between 18 months and two years, said Yundt.

“This will allow them to save money in their business processes,” said new SAP Canada president Mark Aboud. “Plus, SAP’s integrated suite has full functionality. IT managers can avoid dealing with a variety of different software vendors and platforms.”

As the aforementioned approvals and planning process gets streamlined, they will be run more and more concurrently with the implementations, ensuring that each module can flow from the rest, without stretching on too long. The final time tally? Four to five years.

To help manage this, the organization has been peeking at a few more IT-enabled change management options, including training tool software and collaboration software like Microsoft SharePoint, and will be calling on its system integrator for tips on how to manage the change of the long-term transformation to reap the best benefits from the new shared services model. Said Yundt: “Eventually, these changes could help us move toward more standardization (between hospitals) and better common practices.”










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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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