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Get rid of avoidable re-admissions!

Hospital Readmissions Monitoring

Did you see this headline last month in Healthcare IT News? RPM brings 30-day mortality rate to almost zero for heart bypass procedure. Remote patient monitoring (RPM) offers to extend the reach of care and allow clinical teams to respond faster to changing patient conditions and reduce re-admissions for chronic conditions and post-operative care. While the article references a single site for the results of this RPM program, there have been numerous other studies and reports citing the promising results of these types of programs. Perhaps not a total elimination, but significant reductions are achievable.

There are a variety of companies out there trying to capitalize on utilizing various forms of RPM to capture early changes in the physiologic status of patients. Apple Watch and afib detection/monitoring is probably the most widely known out there of late. But remote monitoring or in-home monitoring devices have been around for decades, with a variety of connections, from dial-up to wifi to cellular. In addition to companies offering remote monitoring devices, there are a variety of companies offering to do the remote monitoring, hiring clinical teams to monitor patient connections. Often these companies can offer the benefit of scale to manage a smaller group of patients that would otherwise be an overwhelming administrative burden.

So what’s the catch? We know there’s always a catch! Remote monitoring sounds like a simple thing to do, and by and large the technology and FDA approvals already exist to make it happen. But as with anything data-related in healthcare, the data flows are a big pain point.

More connected devices from one ecosystem to another. There’s a lot of those in healthcare. Adding another tech burden for clinical teams to trouble shoot and figure out what happened can quickly render an RPM program ineffective. Even the most savvy clinical team and 100% compliant patients can be undone by connections that aren’t talking.

Whether the decision is to outsource and RPM program or handle it in-house, connections need to be reliable to get the right data to the right person at the right time. Anything less can result in a patient heading to an ER or Urgent Care for something that could’ve, and should’ve, been handled in the comfort of their own home. Not only is this detrimental to the patient, but it can also have a negative impact on reimbursement.

Reliable feeds and early notification of problems can keep clinical teams operating smoothly, ensuring patients receive timely care and interventions. Not only does this keep your teams working for the health of your patients, but it also gives patients confidence that your systems are working just as effectively as your clinical teams keeping them healthy.

Automated applications and integration monitoring can help quickly identify and resolve issues to minimize any downtime impact. For over 10 years Tido Inc. has been partnering with health systems to help maximize their IT systems and quickly resolve issues as they arise, often before the end user even notices. Contact us today so we can talk about how we can help you keep your systems working for you clinical teams and patients.

Rise of the [Diagnostic] AI Machines!

Radiologist reviewing diagnostic imaging

Are we ready to welcome our AI overlords into healthcare yet? Will we welcome a fully autonomous Dr. Crusher? We’re not likely ready to completely abandon our human healers, but there have been a variety of algorithms and machine learning applications that have been creeping their way into our clinical specialties for many years now. The first AI algorithm was approved by the FDA in 1995, in the beginning of 2023 there are 520. The specialty with the largest number? Radiology! Check out this article from HealthExec, it provides some more detail on the approval and advantages of AI in imaging.

Radiology, and similar specialties that utilize imaging, have long embraced computer systems to improve quality, productivity, and sharing. The complexity behind the scenes of these systems can be quite surprising. Once an image is captured it may still go through multiple systems just to be viewed, PAC Systems, VNA, Dicom viewers, the route is anything but direct. If we want to add another step in the process to have the image analyzed, we are faced with yet another connection.

In a previous blog post we pointed out the challenges that staff face when one of these systems aren’t communicating, these certainly impact our physicians as well. As we add more diagnostic solutions to aid our physicians in treating patients, we want to ensure that their time is actually spent doing what they are trained for. The average radiologist makes roughly $300,000 per year, if we assume that radiologist works 40 hours per week, that’s about $144 per hour.

What happens when the machines stop talking? Likely the radiologist calls the help desk… 5 minutes on hold ($12), they will take 3 minutes to explain the problem to the help desk person ($7.20), who will then transfer them to a specialist where they take another 5 minutes talking over the problem ($12). Helpdesk will then forward the issue to multiple analysts and integration team. At-least 2 different analysts getting pulled into diagnosing the issue. Typically, integration and system analysts make 90k-130k per year or on average $50 per hour. These 2 analysts will work on this issue for about 30min ($100) to diagnose the issue. $131.20 may not seem like a significant amount, but now that radiologist may not be reviewing images, may not be discussing treatments with patients, they may not be doing what they’ve been trained to do. If the radiologist is only 50% as productive without this solution, every hour of outage costs $132…  That’s just for one Radiologist. And typically system issues affect all users. So once you multiply the outage costs for all radiologists and other team members it really adds up fast. There can also be significant downstream impacts to other services waiting on imaging as well that become harder to calculate.

Moving beyond the frustration of the healthcare teams, there can be a detrimental impact to patient satisfaction as well. As results are delayed and the team gets backed up, every hour of delay adds to the patient’s anxiety and fear. Anxiety and fear are not feelings we want our patients to experience, we want them to have confidence in our teams and systems.

Automated applications and integration monitoring can help quickly resolve these problems. With early notifications to the right team in a timely manner, problems can be quickly resolved to minimize downtime impacts. For over 10 years Tido Inc. has been partnering with health systems to help maximize their IT systems and quickly resolve issues as they arise, often before the end user even notices. Contact us today and so we can talk about how we can help you keep your systems working for your clinical teams.

HIMSS 2023 – What did we take away?

Tido Inc. at HIMSS Conference

From cars to healthcare, Vik and John chat about a variety of topics in the latest This Week in Health Tech podcast, but we focused on Vik’s experience from HIMSS. Check out the episode, we chatted a bit about AI generated automated responses to patient messages to physicians.

After our conversation an interesting study was released in JAMA about ChatGPT outperforming physicians on empathy responding to messages. There’s a lot to unpack there! There is some controversy surrounding the applicability of the study and how it was conducted, but it does raise interesting questions and possibilities for the future. It brings us back to the question about where to use technology in healthcare? How do we do this without unintended consequences or further alienating patients from healthcare? If patient’s know they are interacting with a computer, how does this impact engagement and adherence? What is the applicability in the healthcare environment?

Part of the promise of AI is to do what people do, only do it faster. Synthesize information into a coherent string of words delivered in a certain style. When we consider a response to a patient inquiry, LLMs have the ability to aggregate styles and deliver an empathetic response, they also have the luxury of time, being able to do it quickly. It can take about 15-30 seconds for these AI models to generate a response, it takes a clinician longer to craft a meaningful response.

If we allow AI to write a response, then we still need the human to read it over and make sure it is relevant, applicable, and appropriate. This assurance takes time from the clinician to read over the response, understand the patient question, the context, the patient background, and for some questions to dig a bit deeper and find out why the patient is asking a question.

Before we seek out another solution with many unknowns, we should start to look at what we have now and consider whether or now we are optimizing the current systems. Will a new AI solution really save time, or will it increase the burden with more back and forth? There are so many interconnected solutions out there, are we actually utilizing them, or are we working around them?

Making incremental, seemingly insignificant, improvements can have dramatic improvements to clinical efficiency. Reliable interconnected systems, making sure the information is flowing back and forth, and ensuring that any AI solutions that we will come to rely on actually have access to all the information, is just as essential now as it will be in the future. Disconnected systems can render AI just as inefficient as they render our clinical teams now.

Want to make sure your systems are talking to each other? Tido’s automated applications and integration monitoring can avoid many of the problems and inefficiencies that clinical teams, and AI, will experience when networks aren’t communicating and the information isn’t flowing smoothly. For over 10 years we’ve been partnering with health systems to ensure their getting the most from their current investments. Contact us today and see how we can work with you to optimize your technology investments.

Are your charges still floating in the clouds?

Health System lost charges

How long did it take for those charges to drop? Was it halfway through the cycle? When did you find out they didn’t? Billing is seldom a simple process, with a variety of different systems required to communicate in order to get reports from the procedure to the billing department. Missing reports can prevent the charges from dropping, wreaking havoc on your revenue cycle.

Reconciliation can catch this, but how often is this done? Once a month? Once a week? 7 days and up to 4 weeks is way too long to find a problem. When you consider how long payment cycles can drag on, delaying them further can be problematic.

I’ve written often on the problems network breaks can cause on clinical teams. Broken networks can cause frustration for every department, not just the clinical teams. Billing is connected to almost every system in the hospital or practice, it’s even more vulnerable to these problems, relying on all these systems working to get an accurate picture of the supplies and time. If the report from Radiology didn’t cross over from the PACS to the VNA to the EHR, will it ever show as completed? If it shows as completed, is the report actually there and available to the billing department?

There are dozens of systems with dozens of different tech stacks, from reporting to supplies to pharmacy, getting a hand on each one to make sure they’re talking can be difficult. With most identification of issues coming from the end user, you often won’t know there’s a problem until its too late. Automated applications and integration monitoring can avoid many of these delays. Notifying the right teams early so problems can be addressed quickly, often before the end users even notice, can keep these teams working and the revenue cycling.

Tido Inc. can help you avoid these costly delays. How confident are we in this? Quite, confident. We have over 10 years of experience partnering with health systems and hospitals on their technology needs, from application monitoring to a variety of digital packages to support their operations.

Need more convincing? Contact us! We’re happy to talk about our processes and some of the results we’ve achieved. In fact, we’re willing to give you 3 months free to try it out, but there’s a catch… Only if you mention the song hinted at in this blog! Check out the next This Week in Health Tech podcast with Vik Patel and I’ll reveal the song!

We know convincing our colleagues in the finance office of the value of this service can be challenging just on the say-so of the vendor, so we’ll help you show the results with a free trial before you have to go and ask for a bigger slice of that pie.

Harnessing that free energy in healthcare.

healthcare free employee time

This isn’t about powering your data center with solar cells on the helipad. It’s actually about capturing the creativity and time that you’re already paying for. Clinical staff inside hospitals are powerhouses of innovation and creativity. Have you seen what a nurse can do with a roll of 3M transpore tape?!

I only half kid about the tape, but anyone who has tried to introduce new solutions and technology into a clinical workspace has undoubtedly been met with skepticism. Anyone who has gone back to see how those systems and tools are actually used, has undoubtedly been surprised to see how and if they were used.

Are those tablets waterproof? They make great trays for carrying medications and water.

Giving clinical staff back time to focus on their patients and get creative with solutions for systems, processes, and technology innovation can be invaluable. In a time when doctors, nurses and technologists are leaving the bedside and joining tech companies, it can be more important than ever to retain that staff and capture those ideas. Many of these ideas are not large scale changes to the macro environment, they are small and relatively simple ideas that make interactions and workflows easier that can lead to better engagement.

How do you give back time? When we think of the time wasted on inefficient processes, especially when it comes to inefficient IT systems, there is a large opportunity to free up time. In previous posts I’ve written about the inefficiency of reporting application and integration outages and how early notification can save clinical time.

How do you harness that “free” energy? Since you’re already paying for it, it’s not really free, maybe it’s more akin to installing a co-generation plant. When you alleviate the burden of reporting IT issues by clinical staff, they are free to focus on their patients, to address their patient’s needs, concerns, and monitor for their safety. Time and attention lead to fewer safety incidents and better outcomes. Beyond that when clinical staff have time to consider their workflows and systems interactions they will come up with better ideas.

Consider all the money spent on “solutions” and upgrades that do not yield expected results. When a new solution is proposed how much engagement are clinical staff able to give before a purchase? How much time and energy are they able to spend making the new solution work? How much thought are they able to give to iterating and improving EHR user interfaces and workflows? All of these things take time, and if they don’t have time, all these solutions will seldom achieve their full potential.

Leveraging IT assets to their fullest potential will improve the ROI, in addition to improving margins. For over 10 years Tido Inc. has been partnering with hospitals and healthcare organizations to leverage the most from their IT infrastructure. Automated applications and interfaces monitoring and alerts, application integration, and assisting with digital strategy. Contact us today to see how we can help capture some of that energy!

I wonder if solar panels on a helipad would work? I think I’ve found today’s rabbit hole!

Freeing up staff to focus on patients… What can we learn from the ticker tape?

Applications and Integration Monitoring - Ticker

Ticker tape was a revolutionary tool for moving information fast. Widely used by the financial industry for the quick transmittal of stock prices, sports reporters used it relay scores, and in many other industries for relaying information fast to people who didn’t necessarily know Morse code. Ever wonder where the 3-4 letter symbols for stocks and sports teams came from? How about the traditional 15 minute delay for financial information? Ticker tapes. Crazy right? Traditional ticker tapes went out with the 60’s (1960’s that is), but today we see “ticker tape” scrolls at the bottom of screens and on LED billboards.

Back to the question at hand… What can we learn from ticker tape? Getting information from the people that have it to the people that need in a timely manner can have a real improvement in operations, saving time and freeing up valuable manpower to handle other tasks.

Having a simple scroll at the bottom of the clinician’s screen showing important information can save time, and reduce frustration. Health systems have numerous moving parts and inter-connected technology. When something breaks, who reports it? The front line clinical staff. When an application / system (EHR, Pharmacy, Laboratory, PACS, Mobile, Web Applications) or interface fails , every clinician is impacted at the same time. Problem with the pharmacy network, blood bank, PACS? The front line staff calls the department first, once they are aware there is a problem, then a person from each department will call help desk. This is where the cascade begins.

In large units there will likely be 2 or 3 people calling the help desk before the word gets around to the rest of the unit. Multiply this time X number of units. The calls quickly overwhelm the most well-staffed help desks. What happens when an upgrade impacts more than one system? Gridlock, like a ticker tape parade in New York City.

Automated end-to-end applications and integration monitoring coupled with real information can be a powerful tool to alert front-line staff of application issues, alleviating the need of multiple calls to the help desk. Freeing front-line staff from calling the help desk, and associated wait time, allows them to keep their focus where it belongs, on the patients. Early awareness allows early response and early action, any clinician will tell you this is key to preventing larger health problems down the road. This is just as true for our IT systems.

Automated end-to-end applications and integration monitoring monitoring can alert IT staff to problems early, allowing faster response and resolution, before the calls to the help desk and online tickets quickly overwhelm departments. IT staff can focus on resolving the problem, not resolving the tickets.

Providing high quality patient care is the mission of any hospital or health system, the networks and systems in place are there to support this mission. At a time when health systems need to get the most out of their current FTEs, effectively utilizing technology to quickly relay important information saves time and money, but more importantly, it can help take one more burden off of our front-line clinical staff. For more than 10 years Tido Inc has been partnering with hospitals and health systems get the most out of their IT infrastructure, from advisory services, to systems integration, to Automated end-to-end applications and integration monitoring, we’re here to help extend the reach of your IT department. Want to know how?! Of course you do! Contact us today, we’re happy to connect see how we can help.

It’s winter, are your data pipes frozen?

Frozen data pipes

Winter can be brutal on pipes, one little spot of missed insulation can cause an air leak that freezes your water pipes. Fortunately there are various systems that can alert you to problems, infrared cameras to detect leaks before there’s a problem, and water sensors to alert when there is a leak.  Imagine testing or monitoring our IT systems like we test and monitor our homes.  Check the systems before there is a problem, or alert us early to take action when there is a problem.  Healthcare is ever more reliant on data flows and pipes to connect the various systems and ensure smooth operation. But how are these problems recognized? Who reports them? Is there an early detection system to alert when there is a problem?

When we build a house it is important to ensure all the pipes are connected and all those insulation trouble spots are tightly sealed to prevent problems down the road when the new owners move in. Fortunately there are infrared cameras and blower door tests for homes to discover potential problem areas. When we’re building new solutions into healthcare networks there are countless points of failure that can occur when systems go live, and with the proliferation of new applications from patient monitoring to clinician web-based and mobile apps, the number of potential points of failure increase. Do we have an infrared camera or blower door test for the maze of networks in a healthcare facility? Testing every connection for a new system, upgrading systems, or implementing a new mobile app will quickly overwhelm even the most well-staffed IT department. Test automation can quickly, efficiently, and repeatedly test systems to ensure that all functionality will perform as expected and provide the end-user experience that is desired.

As much as we can prepare our home ahead of time, sometimes there are events outside of the home that will cause things to go awry. Problems with the electrical grid, gas network or even water distribution can lead to unexpected problems in the home and cause catastrophic leaks. Fortunately we also have tools to monitor the state of our home in the event a change on the outside causes a problem on the inside. Leak detectors can alert homeowners to potential problems, allowing quick action to prevent flooded basements and avoid the physical and emotional stress that comes with clean-up. Similarly in healthcare continuously monitoring networks and automatic notification of an issue can prevent stress on the end-user that relies on these systems for patient. Too often when networks go down, often due to an upgrade or issue beyond the walls of the facility, the end-user is the first to notice. It’s not just one end-user that’s impacted, it can be thousands, and they will start calling the help desk. Applications and Integration monitoring can sound an early alarm and allow IT teams to respond quickly to an event, end-users can be notified early, and IT teams can work quickly to minimize disruption and stress. IT teams should be aware of an IT issue before the end-user, network monitoring can facilitate this.

Back in 2021 research found that one-third of healthcare workers felt that technology contributed to emotional exhaustion, and were frustrated at least 3-5 days per week. In the past 2 years since the study was done, the number of applications and solutions has only increased, as has the technology burden on clinical staff. Clinical staff works to take care of the patient, they seek to prevent problems for patients before they occur, shouldn’t IT systems do the same?

Nobody wants to deal with frozen pipes or disconnected networks. For over 10 years Tido Inc has helped healthcare organizations save over $30 million with our integration and testing packages. Connect with us today and see how Tido Inc can partner with your teams to help build a tighter, better connected, healthcare house.

Healthcare technology in 2023 and beyond!

Healthcare 2023

We’re not making definitive predictions here, but the rapid changes seen in healthcare have been remarkable these past years, and going into 2023 we can be certain there will be new challenges and opportunities. We do expect some themes to continue into 2023 and beyond.

Challenging margins for health systems and independent practices. As reimbursements to health care organizations has languished, the importance of ensuring the maximum returns on existing investments will be key. Over the past decade there have been massive investments in new systems and networks, every part of healthcare operations has been connected to a tech-enabled system. To realize the gains promised these networks need to be functional and reliable. Are your systems working like they’re supposed to? Or does the staff have the impression that ‘nothing works like it supposed to!’ Disconnected applications or unforeseen application issues can cause significant delays, frustrate staff, and waste valuable time. Applications and Integration monitoring can ensure those technology investments are pulling their weight and maximizing return, supporting clinical staff and powering seamless operations.

Healthcare worker burnout and moral injury are likely to be concerns into 2023 and beyond. Network reliability can be a source of frustration for clinicians, reliable systems are one component of providing a high quality experience, interfaces and tools that provide a better working environment will certainly be another. The proliferation of apps and tools to enhance user experience for both patient and clinician will likely continue, albeit at a slower rate than prior years. Having the best possible tools and apps can be a key strategy to keeping employees engaged and patient focused, whether it is a third party app or custom mobile and web applications, new solutions will continue to be front and center.

Over the past few years we have seen a massive shift in how healthcare is delivered, from a largely in-person environment toward more telehealth and virtual solutions than ever before. While there has been slowing in the market for many of these independent services, telehealth will continue to be a necessity for any health service moving forward. In a distributed clinical environment current systems may not be enough to have a fully functional clinic. EHRs optimized for in-person care may not work with distributed clinical staff, will other solutions be utilized? What portions of intake can be automated, how will those answers be populated into the EHR and get to right clinician at the right time? Is the right patient information populating over, medication history, allergies, radiology reports, the list can be daunting. If a new system is being implement over existing infrastructure ensuring adequate testing and integration will be key to enabling high quality patient care. Moving to a new EHR can pose even more challenges, migrating data is complex and requires a high degree of certainty. Managing these data sharing challenges will continue to be a priority as care becomes more distributed beyond a single physical site.

Maybe we’ll offer one prediction for 2023… Tido Inc. will be here and continue partnering with health systems and practices to face a challenging and changing technology landscape! Reach out today, we’re happy to work with you to face the healthcare challenges in this year, and beyond.

Is your digital front door open or closed?

Healthcare digital applicatioons

According to a recent JD Power survey the majority of their respondents have accessed telehealth services and for many services it is the preferred method of interaction. 80% of their respondents report that telehealth is the preferred method for prescription refills. 51% of providers offer an online scheduling option according to a recent survey from Optum. It doesn’t stop there, the digital front door is the modern gateway for health systems to welcome patients.

Imagine walking into a hospital or doctors office and finding a void or blank wall. Sounds a little dystopian, but it is quite possible this can be the experience of customers coming to a website and trying to enter an appointment.

A digital front door is the modern access point for healthcare, and it’s more than just a front a door. Digital strategies require a seamless digital experience for all services offered by the organization. A seamless transition from the digital to the physical front door if needed. Consider all the options available for enhancing the digital experience beyond the front door.

Is the health system going to be offering online appointment scheduling?

Want to steer patients away from the ER and towards Urgent Care with chatbots and digital symptom checkers connected to the first available appointment for telehealth or virtual urgent care?

Customers and the Federal Government clamoring for price transparency, is your system connected to health insurance and billing to offer price estimates?

SMS options offer easy appointment reminders and many other opportunities for engagement, are the messages going through?

Are you offering SMS or online intake questions to speed registration? Are they feeding over to the EHR for the receptionist to see?

Few would argue that the customer’s digital health experience should be as seamless and reliable possible, providing an early opportunity to build engagement and trust. The digital front door may be the first experience a customer has with the organization, if the digital experience is not seamless, doubt starts to creep in about the rest of the experience. Systems that have disrupted connections can lead to a rocky experience for the customer. If they’ve already filled out the registration information online, why do they need to do it again?

High reliability organizations require high reliability systems. While most networks are stable and function as expected, even a small glitch can have large consequences and disrupt the customer relationship. If the patient and clinician experience is that none of these systems work, or do not work consistently, why should they keep using them? Customers place a lot of trust with clinical staff, if the staff doesn’t have faith in the systems, they will steer customers away from digital solutions, negating the time and investment spent on these solutions.

Are you pro-actively monitoring for network disruptions? Is the IT system meeting the expectation of clinicians and staff? Pro-active monitoring, reporting and resolution of disruptions builds faith in the systems that support clinical staff and customers.

Healthcare should be welcoming, are you slamming your digital front door in the face of customers? Check out Tido’s end to end monitoring and digital apps test automation solutions, ensure your digital front door leads to the services your customers want and need.

Hospitals are losing billions in 2022, how can IT improve ROI with existing infrastructure?

healthcare financials

Hospital margins have been challenged by increases in labor expenses and shortages coupled with declining admissions and procedures. As financial pressures increase so too does the pressure on all departments to provide more value, more savings, and a greater ROI. Costs are rising faster than hospitals can raise revenues and prices.

There are a lot of solutions out there that offer promise of greater efficiencies for clinicians, new cloud based software that can provide greater insights into care practices and increased billing. Beyond the internal benefits, there are additional advances in hospital at home programs, and remote monitoring for chronic conditions. There is a learning curve to these systems, and for most it can often take months or years to realize the promised return.

How do you provide greater cost savings and efficiencies in care through existing IT networks and infrastructure? What can IT departments do now that doesn’t require education and training campaigns, massive investments in infrastructure or new systems?

In healthcare we know that early identification of problems is key to the most effective treatment. This is no different when it comes to IT systems ensuring safe and effective patient care.

How about monitoring the reliability of their current networks? All of these interconnected solutions require connected networks to function optimally and provide the necessary advances in patient safety and clinician efficiency. Buying the latest cloud-based AI solution to improve diagnosis, treatments, safety, and insurance denials, is only useful when the network is functioning.

Back in 2018 network reliability was identified as one of the risks to patient safety, what have systems done since then to ensure reliability? The pandemic likely radically changed or accelerated certain IT investments, moving up some upgrades or canceling others.

Calculating a basic ROI for pro-active network monitoring can be accomplished, just looking back at previous blog posts we can often see the time used by staff on this activity. If end-users are monitoring the network and checking for transmission of data and reports, their time is easily measured and value assigned. Are the IT departments measuring this time? Unlikely, but the unit managers can tell you how many hours each person spends on this.

  • When we considered the Cath Lab in a previous post, an RT or RN spends 3-5 hours every week checking feeds. Multiply this by every imaging area in the hospital, the numbers add up very quickly, at the most basic there may be 4 different imaging areas connected.
  • Pharmacy systems were also previously reviewed, how much time is spent reporting issues? It can be up to 20 minutes of a nurses time on the phone troubleshooting, likely with at least one additional call back.
  • How about remote monitoring programs? How much time will a nurse or physician spend on the phone with a patient trying to troubleshoot transmissions only to find that a connection was interrupted within the hospital’s own system?

Taking a look at the overall IT infrastructure the numbers can quickly add up throughout a hospital or health system. How often are feeds interrupted? Likely not that often, but even a single interruption after a monthly update can have significant ramifications to productivity when spread across an organization.

Those are the simple calculations to measure ROI, more difficult to measure are the ramifications to patient safety, staff satisfaction, and perhaps even future IT investment. If “nothing ever works around here” then there will be difficulty getting clinician buy-in to adopt the newest and best technologies.

Pro-active monitoring can enable early detection and warning. A simple message from IT can alert staff that IT is already aware of a problem and working on a resolution. Is IT optimizing the existing infrastructure to provide the best ROI?

Tido provides automated end to end monitoring solutions that will automatically alert your teams there is a disruption.