The World Health Organization (WHO) published a list of errors to avoid when designing, installing or supporting an Healthcare Information System / Hospital Information System / HIS:
This list, named "A Don't List in Setting Up an Healthcare Information System", first appeared in the manual Setting up Healthcare Services Information Systems: A Guide for Requirement Analysis, Application Specification, and Procurement, edited in 1999 by PAHO (Pan American Health Organization) - a branch of the World Health Organization (WHO).
Choosing the best manual to help someone else on the difficult journey of setting up an Healthcare Information System / Hospital Information / HIS is, by itself, no simple endeavor. But, if we had to pick a single book on the subject, it would certainly be the World Health Organization's time proven manual:
Setting up Healthcare Services Information Systems: A Guide for Requirement Analysis, Application Specification, and Procurement, ISBN 9275122660, edited in 1999 by PAHO (Pan American Health Organization) - a branch of the World Health Organization (WHO).
This manual was assembled from the contributions of dozens of knowledgeable and experienced collaborators and according to its editors:
"This book discusses the implementation of information systems and the application of information technology in terms of the requirements in health care services, and provides a comprehensive review of information systems and information technology solutions."
"contains practical guidelines and suggestions to be used by healthcare and systems professionals when embarking in the initial stages of planning and developing healthcare services information systems and information technology (IS&T) applications."
From the manual:
We couldn't agree more.
The Government HealthIt site has an interesting article - The mountain cure -, about the work of Dr. Brent James at the Intermountain's LDS Hospital.
Dr. James has been applying W. Edwards Deming doctrine on improving outcome quality as a means to improve health system's security and reducing costs of operation.
You may find the full article at the Government HealthIt site
Complexity is a prominent characteristic of any healthcare organization.
The Wharton School [of Business - Univ. Pennsylvania, USA] just published a joint work with the George Group about Complexity in Products and Services and how it affects an organization.
In the Wharton tradition that report is clear and concise. Most of the problems pointed also show up in our hospitals and healthcare organizations and for that reason the report deserves a few minutes of you attention.
Taken from the report:
"...three important rules of complexity:
One, eliminate complexity that customers will not pay for;
Two, exploit the complexity customers will pay for;
And three, minimize the costs of complexity you offer."
"Complexity is not easy to recognize, and typically doesn’t raise red flags in financial statements. Very few organizations successfully capture the costs of complexity in their standard accounting systems
...It’s a bit like pollution, It builds up over time, it’s hard to see, but it definitely affects the overall health of the business. It’s a systemic issue created by multiple people so no one person is really accountable."
You may download the full report in .pdf format from:
http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/index.cfm?fa=weblink&linkID=175
You may find the report page at:
http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/index.cfm?fa=SpecialSection&specialId=45
The "Healthcare Informatics" magazine, January 2006 issue cover story is about Six Sigma Practices for the Healthcare Industry.
Six Sigma is a process-improvement methodology that is highly data-driven, and highly focused on achieving very specific, data-documented efficiency improvements, cost savings, and customer satisfaction enhancements.
It seems that executives at hospitals and health plans who have led Six Sigma initiatives are proud of the process changes and cost savings it has brought. They seem to love Six Sigma's focus on the bottom line and quantifiable results.
It is believed that the Six Sigma work can bring important benefits in healthcare for at least three substantial reasons:
The full article is available at: Six Sigma Practices
Related article: Lean, Sigma, Kaizen - will they work for healthcare?
The International Journal for Quality in Health Care published this month (Dec 2005) the preliminary results of a study about the the World Health Organization (WHO) sponsored "Performance Assessment Tool for quality improvement in Hospitals" Project (PATH).
The article is titled "A performance assessment framework for hospitals: the WHO regional office for Europe PATH project"
The following was taken from that article's abstract:
Objective . The World Health Organization (WHO) Regional Office for Europe launched in 2003 a project aiming to develop and disseminate a flexible and comprehensive tool for the assessment of hospital performance and referred to as the performance assessment tool for quality improvement in hospitals (PATH). This project aims at supporting hospitals in assessing their performance, questioning their own results, and translating them into actions for improvement, by providing hospitals with tools for performance assessment and by enabling collegial support and networking among participating hospitals.
Newsweek has a very interesting article by no less than Google's own CEO, Eric Schmidt.
In that article, named "Google: Ten Golden Rules", it is explained how Google has been inspired by Peter Drucker to manage their "knowledge workers".
It seems that they have been following Drucker's doctrine, according to which knowledge workers believe they are paid to be effective, not to work 9 to 5, and that smart businesses must "strip away everything that gets in their knowledge workers' way."
Google believes that in doing that kind of management those that succeed will attract the best performers, securing "the single biggest factor for competitive advantage in the next 25 years"
You may print the full article from: "Google: Ten Golden Rules - printer"
Taking steps to reduce IT turnover - When it comes to the topic of employee retention within the IT industry, most organizations just don't get it. Too often, there is a feeling that IT turnover is an intractable problem and that high turnover rates are simply a way of life. But that's not so -- you can recognize the causes of the problems and move to correct them before they lead to turnover. [IT Manager's Journal]
Innosight which, as you may know, is the latest endeavor of Prof. Clayton Christensen, the author of the Disruptive Innovations Theory, has an interesting analysis of what went wrong in the Merck Vioxx case. The full article is freely available in .pdf format from: The Winner’s Curse
The Commonwealth Fund, a private foundation that supports independent research on health and social issues, has an article on "Taking a Walk on the Supply Side: 10 Steps to Control Health Care Costs"
That article presents 10 approaches that show promise for reducing health care expenditures, the final one being:
10. Implement modern information technology.
All of these savings would be easier to achieve if health care providers used modern information systems. Such systems would lower administrative costs, reduce medical errors, and make it easier to retrieve test results and review medications. Electronic medical records could give physicians timely access to complete medical histories, in many cases eliminating the need to hospitalize patients.
See the full article at: 10 Steps to Control Health Care Costs.