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The electronic health record meets the iPad

The electronic health record meets the iPad

By:  Grant Buckler  On: 05 Oct 2010 For: CIO Canada Creator

The Ottawa hospital's CIO sees an opportunity to extend the benefits of his e-health efforts by adding mobile computing technology from Apple into the mix. Why iPhones will be the next step

Early in 2009 Dale Potter, chief information officer at the Ottawa Hospital, asked physicians how much of the information they needed in their work was available in the hospital’s electronic health record. On average they said about 30 per cent of it was. When he asked again at the beginning of this year, all but two respondents said everything they needed was there.

“I was quite proud of that statistic,” says Potter, who became the hospital’s CIO in fall 2008 after stints as a private-sector IT boss at Alcan Engineered Products and Bombardier Transportation. The improvement resulted largely from Potter’s efforts to address what he sees as a serious lag in the health-care sector’s adoption of information technology.

But when Potter tagged along on clinical training unit rounds, his pride in getting all that medical information online was somewhat dented.

“There’s four or five residents and there’s a staff doc and they’ll go off and visit patients,” he says. “I was there at the very beginning, and what they did is the staff doc sat down at the nursing workstation on the ward, logged on and brought up the patient roster for the day – there were 11 patients that they needed to see – and hit print, and the paper came off. And then he went into each patient record and looked at new lab results, new consult notes, new imaging studies or whatever pieces of information that the doc wanted to be able to take to the bedside, and the residents busily put these in manila folders and they built a stack of folders about six inches high, which the staff doc grabbed and off they went.

“So to me, that just woke me up to the fact that we’ve not failed but we’re not finished yet, because we don’t have ... a way for a doc to use this information at the bedside.”

Fortunately, the answer seemed close at hand. Everyone was talking about Apple Inc.’s new iPhone. Then, just as Potter started exploring using the iPhone to display health records, Apple followed up with the iPad. So Potter started talking to physicians, asking them whether they would use these portable devices to view information at patients’ bedsides.

From that came a project that has put the Ottawa Hospital at the forefront of using mobile technology to put medical records at physicians’ fingertips.

By November, Potter expects to deploy several hundred iPads to doctors and nurses. By the end of the year he expects 1,000 or more iPads to be in use for mobile access to health records, and the number will go up from there.

Doctors, nurses and administrators will mainly use iPads for mobile access to health information within the hospital. The tablet has a larger screen than a mobile phone, making it more suitable for viewing medical images such as x-rays and magnetoresonance imaging (MRI) scans. But they won’t carry iPads all the time, especially outside the hospital, so there are plans to support iPhones starting late this year. Potter even has plans to support the iPod Touch for some purposes.


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grant buckler Grant Buckler 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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