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Winter is coming…

Birds migrate south for better climates.  Is it time to start re-evaluating your EHR climate?

Well known among clinicians are the challenges with many EHR systems, troubling user interfaces, difficulty navigating screens, and the number of mouse clicks required for even the most mundane tasks. As different EHR systems improve and provide more user-friendly interfaces, the challenges associated with choosing the best system for patient care should not be insurmountable.

Staff have finally gotten used to the existing system, so why change? Just because the current system is what everyone is used to, does not necessarily mean it is the best choice.

Health systems and physician practices have more choices than ever for EHR systems. Cloud based systems allow great flexibility and decreased infrastructure costs, traditional licensed software systems can offer more customized security and storage options. Practices may outgrow one EHR and have a need to move on to a new one, maybe the price has become prohibitive, maybe the nature of the practice itself has changed. The reasons for changing the EHR can be numerous.

Physicians, nurses, techs, and whole practices have likely spent countless hours customizing interfaces, connecting numerous devices and apps, and reducing their reliance on fax machines. Choosing a new EHR, for whatever reason, should not be a step backwards.

How do you choose a new EHR to begin with?

How do you handle the data migration?

What about all the existing patient data?

What about all the clinical workflows?

Where do you even start?!

Larger health systems may have an army of IT specialists at their disposal to help answer these questions, but even for large systems a migration of this size is a challenge. Are there the right people in place to begin with? What does the current infrastructure look like, can it even support a new system? For smaller hospitals or independent practices all these questions can seem overwhelming.

In 2016 the ONC published a guide to selecting EHR vendors, while published six years ago, the information is still relevant. For clinical and patient care staff one of the most important questions to be answered is whether or not the patient’s information will be present on day one. All patient data and information should be readily available to provide the continuity of care that everyone expects. All equipment used to enable patient care should be connected and functioning from day one.

Anyone who has been through systems and EHR implementations in healthcare is likely aware of the challenges and pain points that can occur. No matter how much training and testing has been completed, on day one, there will be questions and something will be missed. Clinical staff want systems that just work, and if something is broken, they want it fixed quickly so they can focus on their patients.

If you’ve experienced the challenge of implementing an EHR system, the thought of migrating to a new one might give you nightmares. Don’t let data migration, testing, and support be a barrier to implementing the best system for clinical staff and patients. Tido Inc. can help answer many of these questions with advisory services and assist with EHR migration and post go-live support.

Tido’s Trailblazing Tech Bulletin – Issue #1 Digital Transformations

health care applicationsIssue #1—Digital Transformations

April 20 2022

Hello everyone! We’re pleased to welcome you to the very first issue of Trailblazing Tech from Tido. 

From now on, you’ll receive exciting monthly updates that dig into cutting-edge health tech topics, such as: the future of digital health, innovative interoperability, mobile and web apps, automated monitoring services, and—of course—some juicy tidbits about what’s new at Tido.

So, from the bottom of our digital hearts, thank you for embarking on this journey with us. Wishing you all an amazing April, and a splendid spring season! And we hope you enjoy Tido’s insights on extraordinary technologies that are revolutionizing the healthcare industry.

 

End-users are actually superior to healthcare professionals at rooting out application and integration issues. Why are we passing the buck to them? We can do better!

As it turns out, 95% of integration issues in hospital applications are manually identified by end-users. On average, it takes 35 frustrating minutes for end-users to identify and report issues to the IT help desk—and a gruelling 55 minutes for staff members or vendors to initiate a fix for the issue. 

That’s why we’re working with healthcare teams to use Azure Monitor for automated system monitoring, transforming their digital services to drastically reduce reliance on manual reporting, while also significantly improving customer service. The positive feedback we’ve received is truly incredible!

 

Digital transformation is accelerating in healthcare, but don’t worry—you can keep up! How to provide the best user experience in web and mobile applications.

The COVID-19 pandemic has accelerated digital transformation in every major sector, vastly increasing our reliance on technology to meet many of our daily needs. And healthcare is no exception! 

Our health systems have greatly expanded their digital footprint to better serve our patients, empowering them to perform routine tasks without leaving the comfort of their home—such as paying bills, requesting medication refills, and even receiving personal health updates digitally.

But the process of fine-tuning the user experience has been—to put it mildly—quite complicated. To help other healthcare providers to navigate this important issue, Baptist Health’s team reveals how they’re using web and mobile test automation as a key part of their ongoing digital transformation.

 

The gift of health tech for your healthy ears! Check out this lively, illuminating new episode of our podcast: This Week in Health Tech.

In this jam-packed episode of This Week in Health Tech, Vik and Jimmy have an incredible chat with Dr. Brett Oliver (Chief Medical Information Officer, Baptist Health) to dive into several fascinating topics, such as the future of telehealth, digital transformation, interoperability, cultural change across the industry, and much more.

 

Global Health Tech Buzz:

  1. Chatbot Technology Still Has a Long Way to Go
  2. Meditech and Google Health to collaborate on clinical search in Expanse EHR 
  3. Top takeaways from HIMSS22: What CIOs need to know 

 

That’s all from Tido for now. Thanks for reading! Stay tuned next month for Issue. Subscribe Here.