Events Calendar

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10th Asian Conference on Emergency Medicine (ACEM 2019)
ABOUT 10TH ASIAN CONFERENCE ON EMERGENCY MEDICINE (ACEM 2019) It is a great pleasure and an honor to extend to you a warm invitation to [...]
APAPU SPUNZA Conference 2019
2019-11-08 - 2019-11-10    
All Day
ABOUT APAPU/ SPUNZA CONFERENCE 2019 We look forward to welcoming you to the combined APAPU/ SPUNZA meeting in Perth – the first time the event [...]
2nd World Cosmetic and Dermatology Congress
2019-11-11 - 2019-11-12    
All Day
ABOUT 2ND WORLD COSMETIC AND DERMATOLOGY CONGRESS 2nd World Cosmetic and Dermatology Congress is going to be held at Helsinki, Finland during November 11-12, 2019. International Congress on Cosmetic [...]
Global Experts Meet on Advanced Technologies in Diabetes Research and Therapy
2019-11-11 - 2019-11-12    
All Day
ABOUT GLOBAL EXPERTS MEET ON ADVANCED TECHNOLOGIES IN DIABETES RESEARCH AND THERAPY It is an incredible delight and a respect to stretch out our warm [...]
Global Congress on Cancer Immunology and Epigenetics
2019-11-13 - 2019-11-14    
All Day
ABOUT GLOBAL CONGRESS ON CANCER IMMUNOLOGY AND EPIGENETICS Epigenetics Conference, The world’s largest Epigenetics Conference and Gathering for the Research Community. Join the Global Congress [...]
Advantage Healthcare-India 2019
ABOUT ADVANTAGE HEALTHCARE-INDIA 2019 ADVANTAGES OF HEALTHCARE AND WELLNESS INDUSTRY IN INDIA: State of the art Hospitals with Excellent Infrastructure Largest pool of Highly qualified [...]
4th International Conference on Obstetrics and Gynecology
2019-11-14 - 2019-11-15    
All Day
ABOUT 4TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY Theme: Current Breakthroughs and Innovative Approaches towards Improving Women’s Reproductive HealthIt’s our pleasure to invite all the [...]
Encompass Health at AAPM&R 2019 in San Antonio
2019-11-15 - 2019-11-17    
All Day
Encompass Health at AAPM&R 2019 in San Antonio San Antonio, Texas Nov 14, 2019 11:00 a.m. CST Headed to AAPM&R’s 2019 Annual Assembly? Swing by [...]
7th Annual Congress on Dental Medicine and Orthodontics
ABOUT 7TH ANNUAL CONGRESS ON DENTAL MEDICINE AND ORTHODONTICS Dentistry Medicine 2019 is a perfect opportunity intended for International well-being Dental and Oral experts too. [...]
ABOUT MEDICA 2019
2019-11-18 - 2019-11-21    
All Day
ABOUT MEDICA 2019   MEDICA is the world’s largest event for the medical sector. For more than 40 years it has been firmly established on [...]
7th Annual Congress on Dental Medicine and Orthodontics
2019-11-18 - 2019-11-19    
All Day
ABOUT 7TH ANNUAL CONGRESS ON DENTAL MEDICINE AND ORTHODONTICS Dentistry Medicine 2019 is a perfect opportunity intended for International well-being Dental and Oral experts too. [...]
20 Nov
2019-11-20 - 2019-11-21    
All Day
  Connected Insurance: The USA’s Premier Gathering Defining the Future of Insurance Since the year 2000, 50 percent of the Fortune 500 companies have disappeared [...]
International Conference on Pathology and Infectious Diseases
2019-11-21 - 2019-11-22    
All Day
ABOUT INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON PATHOLOGY AND INFECTIOUS DISEASES Infectious disease 2019 gathers the world’s leading scientists, researchers and scholars to exchange and share their professional [...]
15th Asian-Pacific Congress of Hypertension 2019
2019-11-24 - 2019-11-27    
All Day
ABOUT 15TH ASIAN-PACIFIC CONGRESS OF HYPERTENSION 2019 The Asian-Pacific Society of Hypertension will hold the 15th Asian Pacific Congress of Hypertension (APCH2019) in Brisbane, Australia, [...]
18th Annual Conference on Urology and Nephrological Disorders
2019-11-25 - 2019-11-26    
All Day
ABOUT 18TH ANNUAL CONFERENCE ON UROLOGY AND NEPHROLOGICAL DISORDERS Urology 2019 is an integration of the science, theory and clinical knowledge for the purpose of [...]
2nd World Heart Rhythm Conference
2019-11-25 - 2019-11-26    
All Day
ABOUT 2ND WORLD HEART RHYTHM CONFERENCE 2nd World Heart Rhythm Conference is among the World’s driving Scientific Conference to unite worldwide recognized scholastics in the [...]
Digital Health Forum 2019
ABOUT DIGITAL HEALTH FORUM 2019 Join us on 26-27 November in Berlin to discuss the power of AI and ML for healthcare, healthcare transformation by [...]
2nd Global Nursing Conference & Expo
ABOUT 2ND GLOBAL NURSING CONFERENCE & EXPO Events Ocean extends an enthusiastic and sincere welcome to the 2nd GLOBAL NURSING CONFERENCE & EXPO ’19. The [...]
International Conference on Obesity and Diet Imbalance 2019
2019-11-28 - 2019-11-29    
All Day
ABOUT INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON OBESITY AND DIET IMBALANCE 2019 Obesity Diet 2019 is a worldwide stage to examine and find out concerning Weight Management, Childhood [...]
Events on 2019-11-07
Events on 2019-11-08
Events on 2019-11-13
Events on 2019-11-14
Events on 2019-11-15
Events on 2019-11-20
20 Nov
20 Nov 19
Chicago
Events on 2019-11-21
Events on 2019-11-24
15th Asian-Pacific Congress of Hypertension 2019
24 Nov 19
Merivale St & Glenelg Street
Events on 2019-11-26
Digital Health Forum 2019
26 Nov 19
Marinelli Rd Rockville
Events on 2019-11-28
Articles

HIMSS Conference Travelers Have Them, Bankers Have Them, But Where Are The Medical Apps For Providers and Patients?

himss conference

Exclusive Article at EMRIndustry.com by Thanh Tran, CEO, Zoeticx, Inc.

Thanh Tran is CEO and Co-Founder of Zoeticx, Inc., a medical software company located in San Jose, CA. He is a 20 year veteran of Silicon Valley’s IT industry and has held executive positions at many leading software companies.

Imagine if banks did not have applications to support mortgage processing! Everything has to be done via a manual process, moving the loan through different verifications and approvals through human coordination. Consumers have to provide bank statements instead of credential approvals to retrieve the information electronically.

Imagine there is no car loan application! Again, the closing process for a car rolling out of the parking lot takes weeks, instead of hours. What would be the impact to the overall economy?

If air travel would work like healthcare (https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=5J67xJKpB6c) This humorous video depicts the struggle a passenger would have when making an airline reservation without carrier interoperability. The difference is in healthcare the cost would be much more severe in terms of resources, the impact on patient outcomes, and in a number of occasions, the patient’s life.

HIMSS 2015 attendees traveling to Chicago will experience travel bookings with multiple airlines, hotels and car rentals. The traveler is at the center of all of the services designed to fit their needs.  Healthcare does have its own challenges in term of patient privacy, but on the IT perspective, the challenges for interoperability and the demand for applications to fulfill the patient’s needs are the same.

With the HIMSS Conference right around the corner, hospital CIOs and other administrators might want to consider this impact on healthcare as providers ask one simple question: Where are the healthcare applications? Or an even more challenging question; is there a notion of a healthcare application? Is healthcare different from any other vertical industries? Do applications replace physicians or do physicians require applications to address needs in specific care environments?

Why Do We Transform Care Providers into Database Administrators?

EMR and EHR systems are the main engines for the transition of paper to electronic medical records. These systems are designed to record patient medical conditions. They are generic systems with core functionalities similar to a database system.

The former paper medical environment is not just about recording, but supporting manual processes in specific care environments. The most obvious examples are the flow charts built on top of generic EMR and EHR systems. An ICU nurse flow sheet is different than the general visit document from an outpatient clinician. An oncology medical recording is different than a cardiology one. The obvious imbalance on the coverage of an electronic recording system and the expectation of an automated environment is that the paper environment has been overlooked, leading to today’s challenges for providers.

Most of providers’ frustrations have centered on the expectations of a full replacement of the existing paper environment, and further advancements through automation of a generic database oriented EMR or EHR systems. The end result is that providers are presented with a generic database system requiring a database administrator’s skill from its end users. This situation is the same if financial applications do not exist and loan officers are presented with Oracle or Sybase user interfaces to perform their loan processing.  Healthcare is much more complicated and impactful since medical errors can impact liability costs and patient lives.

EMR and EHR systems do not cover these diverse processes. They are designed to form a solid base for such processes to be automated, improvements in efficiency, and reduction in costs. The challenge in healthcare today is that the direct end users of such database component should not be care providers.

Healthcare Applications to Address Providers’ Needs in Diverse Care Environments

There is no one-size-fits-all for healthcare providers. They simply need next steps to provide different flow charts for different care environments, often referred as ‘EMR workarounds’. But its description incorrectly assumes that one day an EMR system will provide all needs for providers.

Applications are not ‘database workarounds’.  Applications are entities to support automation and to support end user efficiencies.  Applications cannot exist without a database component and are designed to serve end users with a set of specific needs, including ease of use.

As noted previously, loan officers are trained to review and approve loan applications. They are not trained as database administrators tasked with navigating different database systems from different vendors.  Care providers are no different. They are trained to provide patient care in their specific environment. They need specific tools such as healthcare applications to do their jobs, but they don’t have them. So where are the healthcare applications to support them?

Roadblocks for Application Developers—Costly, Complicated Infrastructures

Major healthcare facilities with significant IT budgets such as Kaiser, Mayo, Cleveland Clinic and others have the ability to provide customized environments for their care providers—EMR workarounds. While these customized solutions are relatively simple, they are very specific to one environment. They are also costly to develop, adaption to a new environment is challenging and only the big healthcare organizations can afford them, not a community hospital. The complexity begins with lack of EHR interoperability, but it is not the only difficulty.

Most care environments require the support for a messaging or notification service, a polling service to trigger notification if a patient’s condition changes.  Such services are common and can be shared among healthcare applications. With most of these common services pre-developed, applications developers can focus on innovating solutions for providers to improve patient outcomes and reduce operational costs.

Healthcare needs healthcare applications to address providers’ needs in diverse care environment. We must remove the roadblock so that application developers can focus on healthcare innovation. It is the only way to improve patient outcomes, reduce costs and increase providers’ efficiency and scalability. Only healthcare applications would address care collaboration, patient engagement, and all the challenges being long discussed, but no solutions exist in today’s healthcare industry.

Consumer and Patient Centric Model

Dell Computer’s success has been based on a consumer centric model for computer purchasers. This model changed how computers were built, delivered and supported. Dell’s computers are designed based on that model, beginning with part inventory, hardware designs, manufacturing, and delivery through to customer support.

This process has propelled Dell Computer to a leadership position, but above all, changed the consumer expectation.  From the consumer perspective, Dell represents applications aiming at improving personal computer purchases along with all the supporting capabilities.

In healthcare, we often talk about a patient centric model. Its challenges begin with a lack of EHR interoperability.  Each patient has their own set of healthcare facilities where there records are kept. These records are supported by different EHR systems from different EHR vendors.

This is where the patient medical information flow begins, but it does not stop there. Each patient has different healthcare needs from different care environments where care providers’ collaborations are different. Each of these environments requires different processes to focus on patient care.

Here are two examples of healthcare’s current state in terms of a patient centric model.

  • A patient is discharged from a hospital after a surgery. The discharge report instructs that the patient checks in to a wound care center for follow-up. In today’s environment, there is no support for ‘patient follow-up’ and ‘anticipation of potential healthcare problems’. What if the patient does not check in to the wound care center? What would be the patient’s challenge to get to the wound care center? Hospitals and clinics are incented to provide such follow-ups and hand-offs between healthcare facilities, but there is no application or mechanism to support its efforts. At best, it would be a manual, human intensive engagement.
  • A patient checks in to emergency room for a bone fracture. The emergency room physician deems that a general doctor can handle the treatment the next day. An x-ray is taken and some basic check-ins are done at the ER. The patient shows up at the general doctor’s office. What are today’s capabilities for such seamless hand-offs from an ER to a general physician?

These are simple examples of a patient centric model. There are huge benefits for such seamless engagements as noted in the CMS care guideline.

Addressing Healthcare Based on a Patient Centric Model

A patient centric model needs to be supported by applications. Healthcare applications are required to support a seamless process across multiple healthcare facilities. Such applications need the support of a seamless medical information flow, personalized on a per-patient case like an airline or a bank has.

Healthcare applications are missing. Health IT organizations cannot fulfill their support to medical professionals. Patient centric models have been a theory, or at best, supported by manual processes, exposed to human errors. Healthcare application availability has been limited by the healthcare infrastructure and the lack of common services mostly available for its siblings in other vertical markets described earlier.

Not Just Generic Middleware, But Healthcare Middleware

Healthcare applications face different challenges than their counterpart in consumer applications. They are not designed to replace providers or to improve the efficiency and scalability of providers. EMR and EHR systems have common characteristics with a database system, but they are designed for healthcare. In other words, healthcare needs its own stack.

Healthcare middleware must address all the common services required to support application development. Having a set of APIs access EMR and EHR systems is the starting point, but not the complete solution. Messaging, workflow, rule engine services, and more must be part of a middleware solution. Its footprint must be lightweight and cost efficient so that it can be embedded with the applications.

The real healthcare challenge is addressing the missing healthcare applications in support of a diverse care environment. Our efforts must align to inspire developers in addressing providers’ needs. It will be healthcare applications that will evolve healthcare to the next level.

However, healthcare 2.0 organizations like Zoeticx are beginning to make a difference. Zoeticx uses middleware technology to integrate with EHRs to overcome their lack of support for interoperability. The Zoeticx Patient-Clarity platform is patient-centric healthcare software that uses middleware to enable patient medical information to flow from diverse EHR sources, presenting patient medical data across the care continuum, transforming passive patient medical data into actionable information.

Its Health Oriented Architecture (HOA) leverages IT advancements from vertical market platforms such as finance. This architecture also enables it to readily support the next generation of healthcare applications which can easily be built by health record app developers through its open API.