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The International Meeting for Simulation in Healthcare
2015-01-10 - 2015-01-14    
All Day
Registration is Open! Please join us on January 10-14, 2015 for our fifteenth annual IMSH at the Ernest N. Morial Convention Center in New Orleans, Louisiana. Over [...]
Finding Time for HIPAA Amid Deafening Administrative Noise
2015-01-14    
1:00 pm - 3:00 pm
January 14, 2015, Web Conference 12pm CST | 1pm EST | 11am MT | 10am PST | 9am AKST | 8am HAST Main points covered: [...]
Meaningful Use  Attestation, Audits and Appeals - A Legal Perspective
2015-01-15    
2:00 pm - 3:30 pm
Join Jim Tate, HITECH Answers  and attorney Matt R. Fisher for our first webinar event in the New Year.   Target audience for this webinar: [...]
iHT2 Health IT Summit
2015-01-20 - 2015-01-21    
All Day
iHT2 [eye-h-tee-squared]: 1. an awe-inspiring summit featuring some of the world.s best and brightest. 2. great food for thought that will leave you begging for more. 3. [...]
Chronic Care Management: How to Get Paid
2015-01-22    
1:00 pm - 2:00 pm
Under a new chronic care management program authorized by CMS and taking effect in 2015, you can bill for care that you are probably already [...]
Proper Management of Medicare/Medicaid Overpayments to Limit Risk of False Claims
2015-01-28    
1:00 pm - 3:00 pm
January 28, 2015 Web Conference 12pm CST | 1pm EST | 11am MT | 10am PST | 9AM AKST | 8AM HAST Topics Covered: Identify [...]
Events on 2015-01-10
Events on 2015-01-20
iHT2 Health IT Summit
20 Jan 15
San Diego
Events on 2015-01-22
Articles

Jan 13 : Columbus company’s software acts as health-care ‘storm tracker’

columbus
By Ben Sutherly – The Columbus DispatchDr. Lawrence Lynn says American medicine is overdue for a revolution in how it spots and tracks disease.“Today, you can be in the hospital dying of sepsis with a smartphone in your pocket that can detect the pattern of a song just by listening to it,” said Lynn, a long-time local inventor and pulmonary critical care doctor.“But this sophisticated-looking monitor above you can’t detect a single pattern of evolving death.”

The problem, as Lynn sees it, is that monitors hooked up to patients sound an alarm only when vital signs reach a specified threshold.

“We have this simple fire alarm idea that existed from the 1980s, and it didn’t evolve, it didn’t improve,” Lynn said.

The decades-old approach sometimes is helpful but often leads to “alarm fatigue” among nurses.

And too often, Lynn said, such warnings come too late in a critical window of time when a disease is rapidly progressing but still manageable.

Lynn is more of a patterns guy, arguing that technology can be used to detect and track abnormalities in a patient’s medical condition earlier in their development.

His Columbus company, Lyntek Medical Technologies, invented software that mimics radar images to model in real time changes in a patient’s condition. Think the green, yellow and red images that show the intensity of thunderstorms on weather radar maps.

“People don’t just die of some instantaneous thing,” Lynn said. “There’s an evolution of instability that is often unrecognized.”

The weather-radar concept employed by PatientStormTracker is easily grasped across cultures as well as by both medical professionals and the lay public, Lynn said.

His interest in the diagnostic technology grew out of his background in treating sleep apnea and an interest in addressing diseases such as sepsis, an entrenched scourge in hospitals.

And he said the technology can play a role in developing a response to Ebola outbreaks. Lyntek was invited in November to take part in a three-day event in Massachusetts, held at the White House’s request, to show how technology might be used to respond to Ebola.

Dr. Brian Zeno, one of Lyntek’s paid consultants and the medical director of the Center for Medical Education and Innovation at OhioHealth Riverside Methodist Hospital, said the technology seems to offer hospitals and other health-care providers an opportunity to review a disease’s progression in a patient.

Such reviews could be part of broader evaluations of an institution’s care, he said.

Lynn’s technology “seemed like a very nice way to illustrate what the overall condition of the patient is and how they are doing compared to previous days, previous weeks,” Zeno said.

A clinical trial of PatientStormTracker is in the works at Riverside, said Lynn, whose royalties from past innovations were among the largest received by U.S. physicians during the latter half of 2013.

Developing the software has taken about six years and $3 million to $4 million in programming costs, covered by royalties Lynn has received.

Beta versions of the software will be used for retrospective data analysis at Hoag Memorial Hospital Presbyterian in Newport Beach, Calif., and another hospital in central Ohio in the first half of this year.

Clinical use of real-time data could begin later this year, Lynn said. He plans to include a simulated “smart ICU room” at Lyntek’s new offices at 1251 Dublin Rd.

Dr. J. Paul Curry, a Lyntek consultant and anesthesiologist who retired recently from the operating room at Hoag, said the technology will be used by a hospitalist who reviews the course of disease in patients who die and, when needed, shares lessons with the appropriate doctors.

Curry said there might be a fear of accountability among physicians, but “our team is dedicated to making sure people are not punished, but rather that they learn from this.”

There will likely be some other barriers to broad acceptance of Lynn’s technology.

“It’s quite difficult to obtain a rich, complete, real-time data set from many devices that are used in patient environments. They’re not interoperable,” said Dr. Julian Goldman, founder of a federally funded medical device “plug-and-play” interoperability research program focused on creating patient-focused, integrated clinical work environments.

“I want to see his work succeed and be adopted because I think it’s good work,” said Goldman, a Boston-based anesthesiologist who said he does not have a financial stake in Lyntek.

“We are missing opportunities by not looking at patterns.”

bsutherly@dispatch.com

@BenSutherly

 

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