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Transforming Medicine: Evidence-Driven mHealth
2015-09-30 - 2015-10-02    
8:00 am - 5:00 pm
September 30-October 2, 2015Digital Medicine 2015 Save the Date (PDF, 1.23 MB) Download the Scripps CME app to your smart phone and/or tablet for the conference [...]
Health 2.0 9th Annual Fall Conference
2015-10-04 - 2015-10-07    
All Day
October 4th - 7th, 2015 Join us for our 9th Annual Fall Conference, October 4-7th. Set over 3 1/2 days, the 9th Annual Fall Conference will [...]
2nd International Conference on Health Informatics and Technology
2015-10-05    
All Day
OMICS Group is one of leading scientific event organizer, conducting more than 100 Scientific Conferences around the world. It has about 30,000 editorial board members, [...]
MGMA 2015 Annual Conference
2015-10-11 - 2015-10-14    
All Day
In the business of care delivery®, you have to be ready for everything. As a valued member of your organization, you’re the person that others [...]
5th International Conference on Wireless Mobile Communication and Healthcare
2015-10-14 - 2015-10-16    
All Day
5th International Conference on Wireless Mobile Communication and Healthcare - "Transforming healthcare through innovations in mobile and wireless technologies" The fifth edition of MobiHealth proposes [...]
International Health and Wealth Conference
2015-10-15 - 2015-10-17    
All Day
The International Health and Wealth Conference (IHW) is one of the world's foremost events connecting Health and Wealth: the industries of healthcare, wellness, tourism, real [...]
Events on 2015-09-30
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MGMA 2015 Annual Conference
11 Oct 15
Nashville
Events on 2015-10-15
Articles

Advanced Hospital Records Stored Here Save Lives

advanced hospital records

Diane Humphrey, Joplin, remembers the frustration two years ago as she sat with her stricken husband in the cardiac care center of the old St. John’s Regional Medical Center. His room was close to the floor’s station, where she heard nurses struggling to learn newfangled electronic records software installed by Mercy just weeks earlier.

She didn’t know the digital records would save her husband’s life.

Humphrey’s is just one of a myriad of stories from May 2011 when a massive tornado ravaged Joplin, leaving a path of destruction six miles long and a mile wide, more than 160 dead and thousands injured and homeless. The hospital suffered a direct hit from the EF5 storm; its ruined hulk became an iconic image amid the devastation.

St. John’s co-workers and volunteers evacuated 183 patients. Hundreds of newly injured streamed toward the stricken hospital, where nurses and doctors treated those they could in a parking lot and arranged transportation for others to facilities nearby.

Ripped from the hospital, old X-rays and paper files floated to the ground as far away as Springfield, some 70 miles distant.

It didn’t matter. The Mercy medical records that counted were safely housed in a data center more than 200 miles away. It was technicians there — protected by thick, windowless walls in a Mission Control-like room — who were the first outside Joplin to know something was amiss at St. John’s. They say that’s when the hospital’s computers suddenly went offline.

Mercy’s data center had opened just months earlier in a blockhouse of a building in Washington, Mo., as the centerpiece of a $550 million investment Mercy made in electronic records. The early 2000s commitment put St. Louis-based Mercy and its hospitals in four states at the forefront of technical innovation. It was years before federal legislation would push other health care organizations to embrace the technology.

Through the past decade, the American Hospital Association repeatedly has named Mercy a “Most Wired” health care organization. The technology now fully links all of Mercy’s physician offices and acute-care and critical-access hospitals, with work continuing on those recently added to the health ministry.

Vital in Disaster

Improving patient care and cutting costs primarily spurred the tech commitment, according to Scott Richert, a Mercy tech leader. “We also knew it could help in the case of a disaster,” he said. “But nobody anticipated Joplin.”

Soon after learning of the tornado, the tech team asked Mercy hospitals near Joplin to begin printing the hospital’s records. Trucks carried the printouts to Joplin just hours after the storm to reunite health histories and medical records with patients sent to non-Mercy hospitals. Records came up instantly on computers for patients who landed at nearby Mercy hospitals.

Those included Lee Humphrey, 54. He and Diane, 59, had survived the storm by hiding under a stairwell at their apartment complex not far from St. John’s. The pacemaker implanted weeks earlier recorded how his heart stopped amid the terror of the tornado, and how the device kept him alive — for 2 minutes, 41 seconds.

To maintain his health, Lee also needed medications that doctors had tweaked just days before the tornado. But the drugs and their records had blown away with their apartment, so the Humphreys sought help at several makeshift clinics in Joplin.

Things turned desperate the morning after the tornado, when Lee suddenly appeared weak and ashen. “Lee had turned totally gray,” Diane said. “We had to get his medications, but nobody knew for sure what he needed.”

An ambulance transported them to Mercy Hospital Springfield. His health care history had beaten him there as the electronic blips of a digital network. “Those records saved his life, I have no doubt,” Diane said.

The Humphreys, soon to celebrate their 20th wedding anniversary, are living at least temporarily in a small apartment in a Joplin suburb.

(Source)