Printer Friendly
The Free Library
19,573,962 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

1 year, $3 million, 0 problems: Chicago hospital achieves a 6-month ROI with new emergency department information system, and goes from impairing profitability to improving it.


It's no longer enough for a healthcare organization to expect, or even to derive, only clinical benefits from a software system. The software system that works clinically for patients and doctors must also work financially for hospital and healthcare network administrators--and in fairly short order, too.

PROBLEM

Rush University Medical Center, a Chicago hospital of nearly 700 beds, has been cited nationally in U.S. News and World Report as one of the best hospitals in the U.S. While the institutional side of the healthcare organization was fiscally healthy, our emergency department (ED) was hemorrhaging cash. We estimate that it might have lost $500,000 to $1 million per year--and "estimate" is a key word.

Our clinicians and administrators knew that the ED had problems with door-to-doctor times, wait times within the ED, throughput and comprehensive documentation that captured and coded services for billing. But without an automated system to accurately measure the problems, everyone guessed at their extent--and damage.

Our emergency department is staffed with 19 attending physicians and 60 nurses, and handles about 42,000 patients annually. Approximately 12 resident physicians representing various medical specialties Medical Specialties
See also anatomy; disease and illness; drugs; health; remedies; surgery.

adenography

the science of the description of glands. — adenographic, adj.
 rotate through the ED each month. Until 2001, nurses and physicians documented with paper, using homegrown home·grown  
adj.
1. Raised or grown at home.

2. Originating in or characteristic of a locality: "Rock is homegrown music in the United States, evolved from blues and country and Tin Pan Alley" 
 chart templates that might generate a single page documentation of a patient encounter.

ED staff tracked patients with a large grease board that accommodated little more information than the patient's name and the name of the clinician clinician /cli·ni·cian/ (kli-nish´in) an expert clinical physician and teacher.

cli·ni·cian
n.
 treating him. We might know which room the patient was in with the grease board, but not other staff available to treat him and not the status of clinical orders related to his care. Financially, physicians' collections needed work; the ED had operated at a deficit for many years.

We might have lacked clear metrics metrics Managed care A popular term for standards by which the quality of a product, service, or outcome of a particular form of Pt management is evaluated. See TQM.  about our problems, but our objectives were clear. We wanted to capture more data to clinically improve treatment. We wanted to reduce waiting room times, use collected data for process improvement and quality assurance, and better capture interactions between patients and physicians. We knew that the automated capture and reporting of data would favorably fa·vor·a·ble  
adj.
1. Advantageous; helpful: favorable winds.

2. Encouraging; propitious: a favorable diagnosis.

3.
 influence financials.

SOLUTION

The medical directors before us at Rush also knew that the organization needed an automated emergency department information system (EDIS EDIS Emergency Department Information System (software)
EDIS Emergency Digital Information Service (California)
EDIS Electronic Data Information Source
EDIS Edison National Historic Site
), and they had identified ibex Pulsecheck from Rosemont, Ill.-based ibex Healthdata Systems as the system they wanted. Unfortunately, the funds weren't available.

We came to Rush in 2000 to direct and improve its clinical ED performance, and not acquiring an EDIS would have been a deal-breaker for us. We, too, selected the ibex Pulsecheck system, in part because it was designed by an ED physician. With our advent, the funds were forthcoming. We went live with the system on July 1, 2001, and we have experienced no downtime The time during which a computer is not functioning due to hardware, operating system or application program failure.  since.

Our implementation was relatively painless pain·less  
adj.
Free from complication or pain: a painless operation.



painless·ly adv.
. The first two weeks were challenging because we had more than 80 clinicians using the system, all with varying degrees of computer fluency See computer literacy. . We had set up in-service training sessions for doctors and nurses, but these were only two- or three-hour sessions, and no one asked for more. Beyond those training sessions and the first two weeks, ED staff had no trouble adapting to the system because it is extremely intuitive.

RESULTS

Within six months of installing the EDIS, we captured $1.5 million in additional institutional charges--and this alone was enough to pay for the system. The additional charges emanated from more comprehensive documentation of patient encounters, and also from our ability to use the system's reports to make internal process improvements. By the end of the first year, we measured $3 million in additional charges that might have otherwise gone unrecorded--and turned the ED around from financial loss to financial gain.

The EDIS system has played a pivotal role in helping us to address other process-related issues. One of the biggest was length of stay (LOS), and we found we could use the system to influence LOS from triage triage

Division of patients for priority of care, usually into three categories: those who will not survive even with treatment; those who will survive without treatment; and those whose survival depends on treatment.
 forward.

Today, our overall LOS in the emergency department is about four hours, and that includes treating both the relatively routine cases as well as the most severe--and it's an excellent LOS for an urban hospital. Our "fast track" or express area, for patients who don't require extensive treatment, is about 1.5 hours. Overall, we have shaved shave  
v. shaved, shaved or shav·en , shav·ing, shaves

v.tr.
1.
a. To remove the beard or other body hair from, with a razor or shaver:
 one hour off the LOS of our sickest patients, and one hour and 20 minutes from our moderate-need patients' LOS. Finally, we have reduced door-to-doctor times to about 25 or 30 minutes, which is excellent for an urban hospital.

>From the beginning, we have conducted monthly ED meetings including physicians, nurses, social services social services
Noun, pl

welfare services provided by local authorities or a state agency for people with particular social needs

social services nplservicios mpl sociales 
 and all those involved in the ED. ibex Pulsecheck allows us to not only capture and view patient clinical data in real time, but also to use that data for monthly and annual reporting so we can measure and improve our processes. For example, we identified a bottleneck A lessening of throughput. It often refers to networks that are overloaded, which is caused by the inability of the hardware and transmission lines to support the traffic. It can also refer to a mismatch inside the computer where slower-speed peripheral buses and devices prevent the CPU  in radiology radiology, branch of medicine specializing in the use of X rays, gamma rays, radioactive isotopes, and other forms of radiation in the diagnosis and treatment of disease. . We spent too much time getting patients to radiology, too much time getting films read and too much time incorporating those clinical results into the ED treatment process--and with computerized data as support, we were able to alter our processes and improve our performance.

A simple measure of our success with the EDIS system is that everyone in the ED uses it. We had heard about incremental Additional or increased growth, bulk, quantity, number, or value; enlarged.

Incremental cost is additional or increased cost of an item or service apart from its actual cost.
 installations, but decided that wasn't for us. Our position was, "This is our ED record. There's no alternative. Use it." Everyone did. We had no holdouts or slow adopters.

In the beginning, the system was regarded as a novelty; everyone was intrigued with the new set of tools. As we began to build interfaces to Rush University's other systems (Cerner for labs, Siemens for HIS) and they could see the ED medical record being populated pop·u·late  
tr.v. pop·u·lat·ed, pop·u·lat·ing, pop·u·lates
1. To supply with inhabitants, as by colonization; people.

2.
 with data and results from interfaced systems--that's when support for it took off. Today, we have all data for ED patients contained in ibex Pulsecheck--lab orders and results, nursing orders, X-ray orders and physician documentation. We have achieved the clinical and process improvement results we sought, and in short order, have added to the bottom line as well.

For more information about ibex Pulsecheck EDIS, www.rsleads.com/404ht-203

SOURCES

Dino P. Rumoro, D.O., Clinical Chairman

Julio C. Silva sil·va also syl·va  
n. pl. sil·vas or sil·vae
1. The trees or forests of a region.

2. A written work on the trees or forests of a region.
, M.D., Associate Clinical Chairman

Department of Emergency Medicine

Rush University Medical Center

Chicago

PRODUCT/COMPANY

ibex Pulsecheck EDIS

ibex Healthdata Systems

Rosemont, Ill.

www.ibexhealthdata.com
COPYRIGHT 2004 Nelson Publishing
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2004 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:What works: emergency dept. information systems; Rush University Medical Center uses ibex Pulsecheck
Publication:Health Management Technology
Geographic Code:1U3IL
Date:Apr 1, 2004
Words:1069
Previous Article:In with the old: "writing" is the newest form of technology, thanks to digital pens and paper.
Next Article:Patient Safety solution.
Topics:



Related Articles
IT in the ED: the nature of emergency department medicine means specific and comprehensive IT needs for clinicians. (Emergency Department Information...
EDIS for patient tracking.
End-users: four benefits: countless: Clinical information systems aren't limited to documentation in acute care hospitals. Four end-users of EDIS,...
2003 panel of judges.
ED on track with IT: Pennsylvania emergency department computerizes order entry, documentation and charge capture to increase efficiency, reduce...
The waiting room is closed: Pocono Medical Center uses emergency department automation to improve patient throughput, charge capture, electronic...
Integrating ED with enterprise: Washington hospital implements a robust EDIS and integrates it with its HIS.

Terms of use | Copyright © 2012 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles