Sunday, 26 February 2012

Save time with Med Wait Time


ER Wait Times
The holy grail of efficiency in doctors offices, emergency rooms and urgent cares is reducing wait times for patients. Lower time improves patient satisfaction the overall patient experience immensely.
Today you can order a book on Amazon and know how long before you get it, you can can check if your flight is delayed online and get alerts on your phone. But same was not true about health care until now. Yes, now you can get wait time at your nearest ER or urgent care or even information on your doctors office appointments.
There’s an app for that!
Med wait time splash
Earlier on this blog we had talked about how the ipad and mobile devices can actually revolutionize health care. We call it health 3.0.
Med wait time started by Vishal Mehta an orthopedic and sports medicine physician has turned our health 3.0 vision into reality. In May last year he teamed up with a couple of partners to launch the application online and even created an iphone app for that. Vishal spoke to us and said his team is now working on a Android app and now has the ability to send wait times and appointment information as text messages to phones where people do not have a smart phone device or prefer receiving text messages.
Patients can also make appointments through the site. And it’s absolutely free for patients. Doctors offices and ER, Urgent Care can sign up for a small fee and offer all the cool features to their patients. Vishal shared that about 300 clients had already signed up with Med wait time in the chicago area.
For any of our technically inclined readers,if providers currently have an EMR system med wait time plugs into the system and automatically updates information. The manual option is also available for offices where no automated systems are currently available.
We at Healthcare Management Blog will be keenly watching Med Wait Time and bring you updates on any future enhancements or growth. So stay tuned. In the meanwhile do check their app in the app store, if you are in the chicago area or just would like to try it out.

The State of Cloud Standards


As cloud computing adoption rates soar, standards groups see promise with establishing aligned interfaces, rules written into RFPs and SLAs, and harmonized government legislation.
Those were prime expectations for the near-term of cloud computing from discussion topics during an update on cloud standards held Thursday between U.S. and European standards organizations. The virtual summit was led by the Open Data Center Alliance and held in conjunction with the Distributed Management Task Force (DMTF), standards consortium OMG, storage and networking standards group SNIA, and the European telecommunications and network standards group, ETSI. All of the organizations are doing their own work with end users and vendors to establish cloud standards, which are then discussed among the organizations in bi-weekly calls.
Although representatives from the five organizations stopped short of exact timelines and strict guidelines in the discussion, they each provided insight on the direction of standards in the coming year.
ETSI Cloud Chairman Mike Fisher said updated cloud regulation for data privacy, security and accountability is expected this year from the U.S. and European Union, and there are also high-level discussion among Asian leaders. Fisher cautioned that too much diversion on ownership could cause a legal “nightmare” over adoption, particularly in Europe, and urged both cloud vendors and end users to lend their insight to government leaders.
“I think the overall goal [of legislation] is to be similar, certainly with a level of data protection,” Fisher said. “There will be some national and regional differences, but I think the will is there. Whether it’s in place in the right way depends on [if] the people drafting the legislation really understand where the technology is taking us.”
Winston Bumpus, DMTF president, said his group has reviewed interfaces submitted by vendors and that, by and large, they are more alike than they are different. Establishing a base expectation of interfaces in the near future would address end user concerns over portability, functionality and cost, and could provide a better launch point for vendors on competitive innovation. More input from vendors is ongoing, as well as testing from users, some which has already been embraced by the U.S. government-supported NIST.
Richard Soley, chairman and CEO of OMG, noted that issues raised with security of data in the cloud are often matters that could be covered in a comprehensive service level agreement. A scope of cloud security standards could be written into SLAs and even RFPs to give stability to the largest lingering concern over deployment, Soley said.
Bumpus said during the discussion that the formulation of standards represents a “once in a decade opportunity to revolutionize how computing is done.”
“We’ve been chasing this dream of distributed computing for lots of years and I think we could, with a few key standards, really change the face of computing and what customers deal with and how things are interoperable,” said Bumpus.