Escolar Documentos
Profissional Documentos
Cultura Documentos
This
session
is
open
to
NPR
Report
Writers
of
all
levels
of
ability.
Joe
Cocuzzo
is
the
Vice
President
of
the
NPR
group
at
Iatric
Systems.
Since
2000
he
has
headed
the
NPR
Group
at
Iatric
Systems,
currently
21
strong,
which
provides
NPR
Report
Writing,
CDS
Attribute
and
Rule
writing,
Proration
rule
assistance,
and
on-‐site
training
to
MEDITECH
hospitals
in
the
US,
Canada
and
the
UK.
Prior
to
joining
Iatric
Systems,
Joe
was
a
Senior
Programmer-‐Analyst
at
Newton-‐Wellesley
Hospital
in
Newton,
MA
from
1992-‐2000
and
before
that
he
was
an
Applications
Consultant
at
MEDITECH.
305
–
Why
are
ONC
and
Meaningful
Use
Important
to
the
Revenue
Cycle?
Presenter:
Kay
Jackson
Organization:
Iatric
Systems
Abstract:
This
session
will
review
some
of
the
newest
programs
that
will
provide
a
significant
impact.
Widespread
adoption
of
health
information
technology
(health
IT)
can
foster
improvements
in
quality,
safety,
efficiency
and
access
–
key
goals
in
today’s
national
dialog
on
health
reform.
These
goals
may
also
soon
drive
reimbursement,
thus
impacting
the
bottom
line
and
revenue
cycle
and
drive
the
Certification
Commission
for
Health
Information
Technology
(CCHIT®),
a
nonprofit,
501(c)3
organization
with
the
public
mission
of
accelerating
the
adoption
of
health
IT.
Attend
this
session
and
learn:
• What
will
be
changing
in
the
Revenue
Cycle?
• What
is
CCHIT
and
how
does
it
impact
our
facility?
• What
is
Meaningful
Use?
• What
is
ONC-‐ATCB?
• What
are
some
of
the
criteria
for
these
programs
that
might
impact
Access
and
PFS?
• What
information
should
I
share
with
my
Revenue
Cycle
staff
to
help
educate
them
regarding
these
programs/processes
or
government
requirements?
Kay
Jackson
has
a
wealth
of
revenue
cycle
improvement
knowledge
and
experience.
For
15
years
she
was
in
management
at
third-‐party
payor
companies
developing
methods
for
delaying
and
denying
medical
claims
submitted
by
hospitals.
When
she
’saw
the
light’
she
moved
into
the
hospital
environment
where
she
spent
10
years
in
management
of
Scheduling,
Access
and
Patient
Accounts.
Kay
was
then
rewarded
by
being
given
the
privilege
to
develop
and
manage
the
Case
Management
department.
She
also
developed
one
of
the
first
denials
management
teams
at
a
hospital
in
1989.
For
the
past
12
years,
Kay
has
consulted
on
strategic
hospital
planning,
redesign
of
access
and
patient
accounts
processes
and
developed
software
for
the
admitting
and
business
offices.
Kay
has
been
a
requested
speaker
at
more
than
100
conventions.
307
–
Mobile
Madness
Presenter:
Steve
Walker
Organization:
Iatric
Systems
Abstract:
So
many
wireless
devices
–
laptops,
instruments,
handheld
devices
and
phones!
It’s
not
just
staff
that
wants
to
access
the
wireless
network
now;
it’s
patients
and
visitors
too!
Wireless
networks
can
be
a
jungle
and
without
a
map
it’s
easy
to
get
lost.
This
session
is
designed
to
help
individuals
–
from
beginners
to
experts
–
understand
the
challenges
involved
and
identify
the
deployment
methods
best
suited
to
each
organization’s
particular
environment.
Primary
topics
to
be
covered
include:
• Site
Surveys
and
Physical
Challenges
• Network
Topology
and
Roaming
Devices
• Application
Deployment
vs.
Handheld
Deployment
• Bandwidth
Considerations
• Authentication
and
Security
• 2011
Devices
and
Connectivity
Information
As
the
Director
of
Application
Development
at
Iatric
Systems,
Steve
Walker
supervises
programmers
and
manages
the
development
of
all
server,
desktop
and
handheld
software
offered
by
Iatric
Systems.
Prior
to
joining
Iatric
Systems
in
February
of
2006,
Steve
was
the
Network
Services
Manager
at
Central
Missouri
State
University
(CMSU),
where
he
also
managed
the
network
and
servers
for
affiliated
University
Health
Center.
Steve
regularly
presented
at
MORENet
conferences
(Missouri
Research
and
Educational
Network),
acted
as
the
network
security
contact
for
CMSU
and
was
a
member
of
the
MORENet
Security
Committee.
He
received
his
BS
in
Computer
Information
Systems
from
CMSU
and
has
been
programming
professionally
for
16
years.
Steve
served
in
the
military
and
received
four
letters
of
commendation
during
his
US
Naval
career.
In
his
spare
time,
Steve
enjoys
programming,
woodworking
and
automating
home
control
(he
can
turn
his
lights
on
by
saying,
“Computer
–
lights
on!”).
308
–
Survive
Post
Payment
Audits
101
Presenter:
Kay
Jackson
Organization:
Iatric
Systems
Abstract:
Audits
by
any
source
will
now
become
a
routine
event.
Center
for
Medicare
and
Medicaid
Services
(CMS)
and
commercial
payor’s
alike
see
the
value
of
reviewing
the
paid
claim
to
recoup
payments
that
they
now
feel
were
made
in
error.
Medical
necessity,
never
events,
incorrect
service
types
as
well
as
coding
errors
are
being
targeted.
Attend
this
session
and
learn:
• Why
audits
now?
• Learn
how
to
create
a
proactive
audit
team
• Defend,
defend
and
defend
some
more
• Discover
the
audit
volumes
you
should
expect
• Use
the
results
for
process
improvement
• Understand
your
appeal
rights
• Commercial
plans
update
language
• General
information
about
process
• Track
and
report
results
• Create
benchmarks
• AHA
reporting
and
RAC
results
This
session
will
also
include
the
following
audit
types:
• RAC
for
traditional
Medicare
and
Medicaid
and
Managed
Medicare
and
Medicaid
• CERT
• QIC
• MAC
• MIP
• PSC
• HEAT
• OIG
• Commercial
Kay
Jackson
has
a
wealth
of
revenue
cycle
improvement
knowledge
and
experience.
For
15
years
she
was
in
management
at
third-‐party
payor
companies
developing
methods
for
delaying
and
denying
medical
claims
submitted
by
hospitals.
When
she
’saw
the
light’
she
moved
into
the
hospital
environment
where
she
spent
10
years
in
management
of
Scheduling,
Access
and
Patient
Accounts.
Kay
was
then
rewarded
by
being
given
the
privilege
to
develop
and
manage
the
Case
Management
department.
She
also
developed
one
of
the
first
denials
management
teams
at
a
hospital
in
1989.
For
the
past
12
years,
Kay
has
consulted
on
strategic
hospital
planning,
redesign
of
access
and
patient
accounts
processes
and
developed
software
for
the
admitting
and
business
offices.
Kay
has
been
a
requested
speaker
at
more
than
100
conventions.
309
–
The
Transition
from
NPR
to
FOCUS
Report
Writing
Functionality
Presenter:
Dana
Holmes
Organization:
The
IN
Group,
Inc.
Abstract:
Migrating
from
MEDITECH
MAGIC
to
CS
6.0
is
not
exactly
cut
and
dry
when
it
comes
to
your
NPR
reports.
Be
mentally
and
physically
prepared
to
say
goodbye
to
all
of
your
hard
work
and
intricately
built
MAGIC
NUR
(PCS),
OE
(OM),
EDM
and
RXM
reports.
These
will
have
to
be
rebuilt
in
CS
6.0
once
you
determine
if
standard
functionality
does
not
meet
your
needs.
Come
to
my
IN
Group,
Inc.
presentation
and
let
me
shed
some
light
on
the
migration
preparation.
Trim
your
MAGIC
NPR
report
library
before
you
even
begin
to
migrate.
MEDITECH
has
provided
numerous
reports
to
run
and
identify
what
custom
reports
within
your
MAGIC
platform
that
have
not
been
utilized
within
a
specific
timeframe.
Come
your
migration
time,
it
will
ease
your
pain
and
workload.
Dana
Holmes
holds
a
BA
with
an
emphasis
in
Information
Systems.
He
is
a
Sr.
Clinical
Analyst
with
The
IN
Group,
Inc.
based
in
the
West
coast
of
the
USA.
Dana
has
been
working
within
the
IT
field
for
24
years
and
the
MEDITECH
realm
for
the
last
decade.
He
was
the
Lead
Analyst
on
a
MEDITECH
MAGIC
to
CS
6.0
NPR
report
migration
recently
for
a
Providence
Health
System
Hospital
in
the
Pacific
Northwest.
310
–
Optimizing
Pharmacy
Workflow
in
a
CPOE
Environment
Presenter:
Steve
Botwinski
Organization:
The
In
Group,
Inc.
Abstract:
Pharmacy
workflow
with
C/S
5.64
has
been
a
challenge
for
many
facilities,
adding
CPOE
can
be
adding
insult
to
injury.
This
session
will
discuss
options
to
help
streamline
pharmacy
processes
for
order
verification
and
on
demand
dispensing
utilizing
a
customized
Order
View
Board.
This
will
include
a
unique
pro-‐active
process
for
monitoring
and
pro-‐actively
dispensing
IV’s.
Everyone
attending
will
receive
their
own
copy
of
the
board
(either
magic
or
C/S)
that
they
can
easily
install
in
their
system.
Steve
Botwinski
has
been
a
Registered
Pharmacist
in
the
hospital
setting
for
27
years
and
has
worked
with
MEDITECH
for
19
years.
He
specializes
in
the
Pharmacy
Module
as
well
as
PHA.MM
and
dispensing
machines.
He
is
proficient
at
writing
NPR
reports
and
Pharmacy
rules.
He
is
well
versed
in
both
C/S
and
Magic
platforms.
He
is
a
long
time
MUSE
participant
and
has
served
as
peer
group
leader
for
pharmacy
on
the
regional
and
international
levels.
311
–
e-‐MAR/BMV
Optimization
with
Rules
and
Custom
Reports
Presenter:
Bruce
Matthias
Organization:
The
In
Group,
Inc.
Abstract:
The
use
of
e-‐MAR/BMV
is
a
major
advancement
in
patient
safety,
but
there
is
still
room
for
improvement.
The
use
of
rules
and
custom
reports
can
add
a
level
of
optimization
that
saves
time
for
the
users
as
well
as
improves
safety
for
the
patient.
Find
out
how
to
make
your
system
the
best
it
can
be,
including
adding
granularity
to
functional
settings
and
auto-‐populating
fields
to
streamline
the
process
from
ordering
to
administration
of
medications.
Bruce
Matthias
is
has
been
a
Pharmacist
for
over
30
years
and
has
been
using
MEDITECH
for
over
20
years.
He
is
well
respected
in
the
MEDITECH
user
community
for
his
expertise
in
Pharmacy
and
Advanced
Clinicals,
specializing
in
patient
safety
and
system
optimization.
He
has
worked
with
Major
Medical
Centers
and
Systems
including
Providence
Health
System,
Saint
Joseph
Health
System,
and
Huntington
Memorial
Hospital
and
served
as
President
of
MUSE
International
from
2000
to
2002.
312
–
Integrating
REMS
into
your
MEDITECH
System
Presenters:
Yvonne
Birek
and
Bryce
Ouellet
Organization:
The
In
Group,
Inc.
Abstract:
The
Food
and
Drug
Administration
Amendments
Act
of
2007
gave
the
FDA
authority
to
require
a
Risk
Evaluation
and
Mitigation
Strategy
(REMS)
from
manufacturers
to
ensure
that
the
benefits
of
a
drug
or
biological
product
outweigh
its
risks.
It
is
now
time
for
us
to
deal
with
REMS.
The
interpretation
of
REMS
has
not
been
agreed
upon
yet
but
it
is
clear
that
the
standard
MEDITECH
product
is
not
ready
for
REMS.
This
session
will
include
a
presentation
of
strategies
or
tools
that
may
be
utilized
for
addressing
REMS
as
well
as
other
patient
education
issues.
Yvonne
Birek,
Pharm.D,
is
a
senior
pharmacy
consultant
for
The
IN
Group.
She
has
worked
with
the
MEDITECH
PHA
system
for
more
than
20
years.
Her
roles
as
a
pharmacist
have
included:
clinician,
manager
at
a
pediatric
facility,
director
at
an
adult
facility,
IS
support
and
pharmacy
consultant.
Bryce
Ouellet,
a
consultant
with
The
In
Group,
has
been
working
with
Client
Server
5.6
since
2006.
He
assisted
MEDITECH’s
development
staff
with
developing
and
testing
the
pharmacy
module.
He
was
selected
to
lead
the
pharmacy
implementation
for
MEDITECH’s
first
and
only
migration
from
Magic
to
Client
Server
5.6
at
Doylestown
Hospital
in
Doylestown,
PA.
Bryce
is
now
working
on
new
installations
in
the
6.0
environment.
314
–
Physician
Adoption
–
Getting
Them
to
the
Table
and
Having
Them
Stay
For
Dessert
Presenters:
Teri
Young-‐Hise
and
Charlotte
Robey
Organization:
Beacon
Partners
and
Fauquier
Hospital
Abstract:
Engaging
physicians
and
promoting
their
adoption
of
new
documentation
and
ordering
processes
is
a
monumental
task
facing
most
organizations
as
they
move
toward
achieving
Meaningful
Use.
This
session
will
provide
strategies
for
engaging
physicians
before,
during
and
after
the
implementation
process
as
well
as
lessons
learned
from
one
community
hospital’s
initial
implementation
and
how
these
resulted
in
different
approaches
for
their
subsequent
projects.
Strategies
will
include
descriptions
of
how
the
roles
of
the
CIO
and
Executive
Team,
the
Physician
Champion,
the
Information
Systems
Team
and
the
Core
Implementation
Teams
can
affect
physician
adoption.
After
attending
this
session,
participants
will:
• Understand
the
Physician
Champion/CIO
relationship
and
the
influence
it
has
on
the
successful
engagement
of
physicians.
• Understand
how
physicians
can
offer
the
Information
Systems
Team
a
patient
care
perspective
in
the
clinical
IT
project
planning.
• Understand
strategies
used
by
management
and
staff
to
enhance
physician
engagement.
• Understand
the
role
of
the
project
core
team
in
sustaining
physician
engagement
after
the
project
implementation
has
gone
live.
Teri
Young-‐Hise,
MSB,
RN-‐BC
is
a
Client
Service
Manager
with
Beacon
Partners
providing
project
management,
assessment
and
implementation
expertise
for
Advanced
Clinicals
modules
with
focus
on
physician
end
users.
Teri
has
27
years
of
experience
in
the
healthcare
field
as
a
registered
nurse
holding
both
clinical
and
management
positions
in
acute
and
home
health
care
settings.
In
her
13
years
of
work
in
the
informatics
arena,
she
has
facilitated
and
supported
multiple
clinical
implementations
including
physician
order
entry
and
documentation
initiatives.
Teri
holds
an
MS
in
Business,
a
BS
in
Nursing
and
an
ANCC
certification
in
Informatics.
Charlotte
Robey,
MS,
RN
is
the
Manager
of
Clinical
Information
Systems
at
Fauquier
Health
in
Warrenton
Virginia.
Fauquier
Health
consists
of
a
97
bed
community
hospital,
a
Rehab
and
Nursing
Care
facility,
an
Assisted
Living
facility
and
several
owned
provider
practices.
Charlotte
manages
a
staff
of
five
Clinical
Analysts
who
support
all
of
the
MEDITECH
clinical
applications
as
well
as
>30
other
non-‐MEDITECH
clinical
applications.
Charlotte
has
25+
years
of
nursing
experience
including
critical
care
nursing
and
nursing
management
and
over
eight
years
of
healthcare
IT
experience.
She
has
participated
in
or
led
the
implementation
of
the
Advanced
Clinical
applications
of
MEDITECH
including
PCM/POM,
PCS,
eMAR,
EDM,
and
PDoc.
315
–
The
New
Build
for
AOM/RXM
to
Support
ePrescribing
Presenter:
Jose
Castro
Organization:
The
IN
Group,
Inc.
Abstract:
With
the
addition
of
e-‐prescribing
to
the
AOM/RXM
functionality
there
are
new
requirements
for
appropriate
build
of
the
drug
dictionaries.
MEDITECH
has
developed
a
new
process
for
re-‐building
the
AOM
/RXM
drug
dictionary
utilizing
additional
data
from
FSV
to
filter
dictionary
entries.
These
changes
may
require
expunging
your
old
AOM
drug
dictionary.
Find
out
about
how
this
can
be
done
and
how
to
save
you
current
build
data.
Jose
Castro
II,
Pharm.D.
is
a
new
senior
pharmacy
consultant
for
The
IN
Group,
Inc.
Jose
has
been
a
pharmacist
since
2001
and
has
a
strong
clinical
skills
across
a
broad
range
of
diverse
setting
(Ambulatory
Care
HIV
Clinic,
Inpatient
Hospital
Setting,
Clinical
Research,
and
Community
based
Retail
Setting).
However,
majority
his
pharmacy
experience
has
been
in
the
inpatient
setting.
His
roles
have
included:
resident
(pharmacy
practice
and
administration),
clinical
staff
pharmacist,
as
well
as
management
backgrounds
with
focus
on
operations.
Jose
has
been
recently
involved
with
5.64
Implementation
and
Upgrade,
and
currently
participating
in
CPOE
(entailing:
Zynx,
AOM/RXM,
Priority
Pack).
316
–
Leveraging
Pharmacy
for
use
with
CPOE
in
MEDITECH
6.0
Presenter:
Bryce
Ouellet
Organization:
The
IN
Group,
Inc.
Abstract:
With
the
introduction
of
6.0,
MEDITECH
has
made
some
major
changes,
and
removed
some
important,
and
formerly
inherent,
functionality
from
PHA
in
relation
to
CPOE.
This
session
will
serve
to
focus
on
these
major
changes
with
suggestions
on
how
implement
Pharmacy
and
CPOE
successfully.
Topics
covered
will
include
building
Order
Sets
in
OM,
building
strings
in
PHA
for
CPOE
use,
ordering
meds
in
CPOE
highlighting
common
issues
that
do
occur.
Bryce
Ouellet,
a
consultant
with
The
In
Group,
has
been
working
with
MEDITECH
5.6
and
MEDITECH
6.0
since
2006.
He
assisted
MEDITECH’s
development
staff
with
developing
and
testing
the
pharmacy
module.
He
was
involved
in
the
pharmacy
implementation
for
MEDITECH’s
first
migration
from
Magic
to
Client
Server
5.6
in
2007.
Bryce
has
assisted
with
several
new
installations
as
well
as
upgrades
to
the
5.6
and
6.0
environments.
Currently
Bryce
is
working
on
a
large-‐scale
standardization
project
utilizing
MEDITECH’s
Controlled
Management
System
(CMS)
in
6.0.
317
–
IT
Organizational
Models
Presenter:
Roberta
MacDonald
Organization:
Beacon
Partners
Abstract:
Healthcare
Information
Technology
(I.T.)
dynamics
and
care
delivery
is
becoming
increasingly
complex,
with
funding
unable
to
keep
pace.
Hospital
leadership
is
looking
for
increased
efficiency
and
effectiveness
from
I.T.
Many
are
looking
not
simply
for
improved
governance,
but
improved
I.T.
organizational
models.
I.T.
directors
are
under
increased
pressure
to
create
models
that
meet
the
needs
of
today
while
anticipating
future
requirements.
Developing
the
right
model
requires
a
comprehensive
examination
of
the
mix
of
people,
processes
and
technologies
of
an
organization,
while
staying
within
the
confines
of
a
shrinking
I.T.
budget.
The
appropriate
model
for
an
organization
is
one
that
considers
the
unique
requirements
of
that
organization.
Does
it
leverage
your
current
I.T.
investments?
Does
it
help
you
achieve
your
fiscal,
operational
and
clinical
goals?
Does
it
provide
a
stable,
flexible
infrastructure
for
continued
expansion
of
your
Electronic
Health
Record?
Don’t
base
your
decision
simply
on
cost.
Consider
long-‐term
implications,
flexibility,
risks,
challenges
and
advantages
of
each
model
within
a
context
of
your
established
strategy
and
goals.
An
understanding
of
the
conceptual
models
currently
used
to
structure
the
delivery
of
I.T.
services
provides
a
context
to
begin
the
evaluation
of
an
appropriate
model.
A
strong
I.T.
infrastructure
will:
• Align
with
core
business
needs.
• Be
highly
reliable,
available
and
secure.
• Be
cost
effective.
• Maintain
data
integrity.
• Integrate
data
from
disparate
sources.
• Have
well
established
metrics.
Evaluation
of
I.T.
models
must
begin
with
a
clear
vision
of
the
future
with
the
development
of
near
term
and
distant
goals.
A
vision
and
guiding
principle
should
be
defined
for
each
model,
to
direct
the
development
of
business
tactics
and
approaches
for
that
model,
in
support
of
the
organization’s
priorities.
A
comprehensive
review
of
an
IT
model
of
organization
should
include
careful
consideration
of
implications,
risks,
constraints
and
barriers
to
success.
Be
objective,
or
face
project
overruns
or
failure.
Roberta
MacDonald
is
an
information
systems
executive
with
25
years
of
experience
in
all
facets
of
Canadian
Healthcare
Information
Management/
Technology.
She
possesses
an
extensive
track
record
of
building
highly-‐motivated
teams
and
delivering
complex
clinical
and
business
projects
on
time
and
within
budget.
Her
particular
strengths
include
the
ability
to
build
relationships,
lead
a
diverse
group
toward
a
common
goal
and
turn
challenges
into
positive
results.
Prior
to
joining
Beacon
Partners
Ms.
MacDonald
accrued
extensive
experience
in
IT/IM
strategic
planning
and
implementation
at
the
departmental,
organizational
and
regional
levels
in
her
role
as
the
CIO
at
St.
Mary's
General
Hospital,
Kitchener.
She
is
recognised
as
a
long-‐standing
member
and
leader
in
MUSE
and
is
a
founding
member
of
the
Ontario
Nursing
Informatics
Interest
Group.
She
holds
a
BScN
from
McMaster
University
and
practised
as
a
Critical
Care
Nurse
and
Nurse
Clinician
before
moving
into
informatics
and
information
technology.
318
–
What
Are
Meaningful
Metrics?
Presenter:
Roberta
MacDonald
Organization:
Beacon
Partners
Abstract:
Healthcare
IT
is
becoming
exponentially
challenging
to
manage.
There
is
heightened
pressure
to
“prove”
that
value
was
achieved,
increased
complexity
of
IT
infrastructure
and
application
portfolios.
There
is
decreased
tolerance
for
performance
problems.
Defining
IT
Metrics
are
often
perceived
as
challenging,
complex,
and
costly
to
implement.
This
presentation
will
discuss
the
importance
of
Metrics,
and
a
definition
of
‘good’
metrics.
The
presentation
will
walk
the
listener
through
a
how
to
guide
for
definition
of
IT
Metrics
which
support
evidenced
based
decision
making.
Metric
examples
will
be
presented,
followed
by
examples
of
collection
and
display
methodology.
The
processes
for
ensuring
a
360
degree
deployment
of
IT
metric
will
be
included
in
the
presentation.
Roberta
MacDonald
is
an
information
systems
executive
with
25
years
of
experience
in
all
facets
of
Canadian
Healthcare
Information
Management/
Technology.
She
possesses
an
extensive
track
record
of
building
highly-‐motivated
teams
and
delivering
complex
clinical
and
business
projects
on
time
and
within
budget.
Her
particular
strengths
include
the
ability
to
build
relationships,
lead
a
diverse
group
toward
a
common
goal
and
turn
challenges
into
positive
results.
Prior
to
joining
Beacon
Partners
Ms.
MacDonald
accrued
extensive
experience
in
IT/IM
strategic
planning
and
implementation
at
the
departmental,
organizational
and
regional
levels
in
her
role
as
the
CIO
at
St.
Mary's
General
Hospital,
Kitchener.
She
is
recognised
as
a
long-‐standing
member
and
leader
in
MUSE
and
is
a
founding
member
of
the
Ontario
Nursing
Informatics
Interest
Group.
She
holds
a
BScN
from
McMaster
University
and
practised
as
a
Critical
Care
Nurse
and
Nurse
Clinician
before
moving
into
informatics
and
information
technology.
319
–
Medication
Reconciliation:
Before
CPOE
Presenters:
William
Salemi
and
Shann
Ludwig
Organization:
Santa
Rosa
Consulting,
Inc.
Abstract:
The
purpose
of
this
presentation
is
to
assist
those
facilities
who
are
installing
RxM
and
beginning
to
document
home
medications
before
the
physicians
begin
an
electronic
discharge
process.
In
this
case
responsibility
of
documentation
will
fall
upon
the
nurses
or
pharmacists
to
enter,
collect,
and
review
home
medication
data,
then
print
reports
for
physician
review
and
signature.
Although
many
facilities
with
more
advanced
implementation
have
crossed
this
bridge,
some
are
beginning
to
install
RxM
and
look
at
the
processes
needed
for
medication
reconciliation
implementation.
This
presentation
will
discuss
the
installation
and
maintenance
of
RxM,
map
processes
needed
for
implementation;
give
examples
of
reports
needed
to
produce
hard
copy
orders
and
information
for
patients;
look
at
roles
within
processes;
and
discuss
the
current
regulatory
climate
around
medication
reconciliation.
William
Salemi
has
over
15
year’s
of
experience
in
healthcare
IT
as
a
Project
Manager,
Applications
Director
and
Consultant
as
well
as
experience
as
a
Certified
Pharmacy
Technician.
Currently
working
at
Santa
Rosa
Consulting
as
a
Manager
in
the
MEDITECH
Practice,
Mr.
Salemi
specializes
on
the
implementation
and
optimization
of
the
Pharmacy
database
along
with
MEDITECH
Advanced
Clinical
Applications.
Shann
Ludwig
has
many
years
of
clinical
nursing
and
administrative
experience,
and
moved
into
healthcare
IT
in
the
Veterans
Administration
system
15
years
ago.
Currently
working
at
Santa
Rosa
Consulting
as
an
Implementation
Specialist,
Ms.
Ludwig
specializes
on
the
implementation
and
optimization
Nursing,
ED,
and
OR
processes
working
with
MEDITECH’s
Advanced
Clinical
Applications
320
–
BMV
Metrics:
Monitoring
for
Success
Presenters:
Becky
Dawson
and
Susan
Haviland
Organization:
Santa
Rosa
Consulting,
Inc.
Abstract:
Now
that
BMV
is
up
and
running,
you
want
to
know
if
the
system
is
being
utilized
appropriately
to
maximize
patient
safety.
A
number
of
standard
reports
are
available,
but
as
you
run
them
you
have
more
questions
than
answers:
• Where
do
the
numbers
come
from?
• What
is
really
being
reported?
• What
is
an
acceptable
scan
rate?
• How
can
I
use
the
reports
to
improve
patient
safety?
Attend
this
presentation
to
learn
the
answers!
Becky
Dawson,
RN,
BSN,
has
over
30
years
of
relevant
professional
experience
including
ten
years
of
experience
as
a
MEDITECH
consultant,
project
manager,
and
application
specialist
in
healthcare
systems.
Currently
a
Manager,
MEDITECH
Services
with
Santa
Rosa
Consulting,
she
specializes
in
the
implementation
and
support
of
MEDITECH’s
Advanced
Clinical
Applications
with
a
particular
emphasis
on
nursing
and
related
patient
care
disciplines.
Areas
of
expertise
include
implementation
assessments,
developing
implementation
and
training
plans,
coordinating
process
and
departmental
workflow
enhancement/redesign,
facilitating/managing/training
application
implementation
teams,
training
end-‐
users
and
change
management.
Ms.
Dawson
is
fluent
in
current
versions
of
MEDITECH
Magic,
Client-‐
Server
and
6.0.
Susan
Haviland
is
a
Registered
Nurse
with
over
18
years
of
relevant
professional
experience
serving
in
various
Nursing
management,
operational
and
informatics
roles
with
a
track
record
of
successful
outcomes.
Her
experience
includes
15
years
of
end
user
experience
with
MEDITECH
Magic
Nursing,
Order
Entry,
EMAR
and
Pyxis
Medication
and
the
past
year
implementing
and
supporting
MEDITECH
Client
Server
Patient
Care
System.
She
also
has
a
strong
understanding
of
operational
workflows
and
MEDITECH
functionality
enabling
successful
system
implementations.
321
–
Don’t
Be
Denied
Presenter:
Deborah
Meredith
Organization:
Santa
Rosa
Consulting,
Inc.
Abstract:
Denial
Management
is
a
tool
that
can
be
used
by
an
organization
for
meeting
AR
days
and
Business
office
objectives
cross
the
enterprise.
When
we
get
finished
you’ll
have
a
good
understanding
of
how
Denial
Management
is
used
which
can
save
you
hours
of
manual
efforts
and
re-‐work.
Deborah
Meredith
has
over
20
years
of
relevant
professional
experience
including
ten
years
of
experience
as
a
MEDITECH
consultant,
project
manager,
and
application
specialist
in
healthcare
systems.
Currently
a
Senior
Implementation
Consultant
with
Santa
Rosa
Consulting,
she
specializes
in
the
implementation
and
support
of
MEDITECH’s
BAR
Module.
Areas
of
expertise
include
implementation
assessments,
developing
implementation
and
training
plans,
coordinating
process
and
departmental
workflow
enhancement/redesign,
facilitating/managing/training
application
implementation
teams,
training
end-‐users
and
change
management.
Ms.
Meredith
is
fluent
in
current
versions
of
MEDITECH
Magic
and
Client-‐Server.
322
–
Prepare
for
MEDITECH
6.0
Financials
Presenter:
Deborah
Meredith
Organization:
Santa
Rosa
Consulting,
Inc.
Abstract:
Learn
how
Work
Process
Analysis
will
make
the
difference
in
your
project.
You
can
use
it
on
a
project
to
design
and
build
BAR.
After
collecting
all
the
paper
forms,
then
spending
countless
hours
building,
do
you
find
the
process
isn’t
working
as
desired?
No
matter
what
you
are
implementing
the
solution
is
the
same:
Work
Process
Analysis.
Deborah
Meredith
has
over
20
years
of
relevant
professional
experience
including
ten
years
of
experience
as
a
MEDITECH
consultant,
project
manager,
and
application
specialist
in
healthcare
systems.
Currently
a
Senior
Implementation
Consultant
with
Santa
Rosa
Consulting,
she
specializes
in
the
implementation
and
support
of
MEDITECH’s
BAR
Module.
Areas
of
expertise
include
implementation
assessments,
developing
implementation
and
training
plans,
coordinating
process
and
departmental
workflow
enhancement/redesign,
facilitating/managing/training
application
implementation
teams,
training
end-‐users
and
change
management.
Ms.
Meredith
is
fluent
in
current
versions
of
MEDITECH
Magic
and
Client-‐Server.
323
–
Update
on
Clinical
Surveillance
–
Creating
a
Clinical
Review
Display
Board
Presenter:
Bruce
Matthias
Organization:
The
In
Group,
Inc.
Abstract:
Learn
about
the
latest
efficient
techniques
for
clinical
monitoring
utilizing
MEDITECH’s
standard
functionality.
Leverage
MEDITECH’s
Pharmacy
application
with
sophisticated
rules,
clinical
decision
support
tools
and
custom
reports
to
send
information
to
a
Clinical
Review
Display
Board
to
alert
pharmacist’s
to
potential
therapeutic
risks
and
verify
the
accuracy
and
safety
of
medication
orders.
A
special
focus
on
Antibiotic
Monitoring
to
meet
the
new
Joint
Commission
goals
will
be
included.
Key
points
will
include
how
to:
• monitor
laboratory
values
• identify
potential
drug
problems
• protect
the
patient
against
prescribing
errors
Bruce
Matthias
is
has
been
a
Pharmacist
for
over
30
years
and
has
been
using
MEDITECH
for
over
20
years.
He
is
well
respected
in
the
MEDITECH
user
community
for
his
expertise
in
Pharmacy
and
Advanced
Clinicals,
specializing
in
patient
safety
and
system
optimization.
He
has
worked
with
Major
Medical
Centers
and
Systems
including
Providence
Health
System,
Saint
Joseph
Health
System,
and
Huntington
Memorial
Hospital
and
served
as
President
of
MUSE
International
from
2000
to
2002.
324
–
Understanding
Project
Healthcare
IT
Risk
Management
Presenter:
Mary
Moewe
Organization:
Iatric
Systems,
Inc.
Abstract:
Understanding
Project
Healthcare
IT
Risk
Management
–
Assessing
risk
and
managing
it
effectively.
Much
of
project
management
is
composed
of
understanding
risk
having
a
structured
approach
and
knowledge
to
effectively
manage
risk.
Having
a
process
for
identifying
healthcare
IT
risks
and
opportunities
will
make
you
a
more
effective
project
manager.
It
is
a
project
manager’s
job
to
worry
and
maintain
a
“healthy
paranoia”
regarding
risk,
even
if
it
sometimes
seems
a
bit
psychotic.
Having
a
good
balance
between
thinking
about
what
could
go
wrong
and
then
doing
everything
you
can
to
insure
the
project
is
executed
as
planned
is
our
work.
The
visibility
and
level
of
risk
management
appropriate
to
the
project
has
to
be
consistent
with
our
comfort
level
with
risk
and
the
culture
of
the
organization.
The
cost
of
the
risk
response
should
not
be
greater
than
the
loss
impact
the
risk
event
may
cause.
Any
factor
or
risk
that
could
seriously
impact
the
project
should
be
identified,
qualified
or
quantified
and
assessed
for
possible
impact.
This
includes
people,
process,
technology,
organization,
culture
and
environmental
influences.
Learn
how
to
respond
to
risk:
using
avoidance,
acceptance,
monitoring
and
prepare
contingencies,
and
mitigating
or
transferring
ownership
of
the
risk
factor.
Remember,
80%
of
all
project
risks
originate
from
the
same
sources
on
every
project
every
time.
Some
good
examples
of
risk
in
healthcare
IT
projects
are:
• Number
of
sites/hospitals
impacted
by
project
• Availability
and
number,
types
of
resources
• Number
of
IT
interfaces
involved
in
the
project
• Number
of
dependencies
on
other
projects
or
IT
systems
• Time
estimated
to
achieve
the
project
–
often
accelerated
in
hospital
IT
projects
• Stakeholder
Level
of
engagement
–
sometimes
there
are
differences
between
hospital
CIO
and
CNO
• Cash
flow
issues
–
Hospital
budget
cycle
doesn’t
always
work
with
the
project
budget
cycle
• Changes
in
priorities
or
project
objective
by
the
healthcare
organization
or
changes
in
Government
• Lack
of
experience
of
the
team
–
Project
Manager
is
brought
in
from
Radiology,
Nursing
or
Lab
and
doesn’t
have
significant
IT
experience
• Unproven
or
uncertified
technology
The
best
way
to
manage
and
control
risks
is
through
solid
project
management,
effective
project
planning,
and
the
project
team’s
desire
to
protect
the
project.
Mary
Moewe
is
Associate
Vice
President,
Interface
Services
at
Iatric
Systems.
Mary
has
extensive
experience
in
the
health
care
and
project
management
fields.
She
was
Director
of
Information
Technology
for
Hospital
Corporation
of
America
(HCA)
for
four
years
prior
to
joining
Iatric
Systems.
Mary
is
also
active
in
Healthcare
Information
and
Management
Systems
Society
(HIMSS)
and
a
Certified
Professional
in
Healthcare
Information
and
Management
Systems
(CPHIMS).
326
–
NPR
Report
Writer
Debugging
Tactics
Presenter:
Rita
Huneycutt
Organization:
CSC
Abstract:
This
presentation
will
cover
debugging
tactics
for
NPR
reports
in
Magic
and
Client
Server.
Topics
covered
will
include
methods
to
break
out
to
the
debugging
screen
from
an
NPR
report
and
various
methods
to
analyze
variable
values
once
at
the
debugging
prompt.
This
presentation
is
geared
to
the
intermediate/advanced
report
writer.
Rita
Huneycutt
is
an
analyst/programmer
with
the
Application
Managed
Services
Sector
of
the
Health
Delivery
Division
at
CSC.
At
CSC,
her
role
includes
NPR
reports,
HL7
interfaces
and
data
conversions.
She
also
conducts
NPR
training
classes.
She
has
more
than
20
years
of
experience
in
healthcare
IT
and
holds
MCAD
and
CIW
certifications.
Prior
to
coming
to
CSC
in
2007,
she
was
a
programmer/analyst
at
Stanly
Regional
Medical
Center
specializing
in
data
extraction
and
process
automation.
Prior
to
that,
she
was
a
programmer
with
Specialized
Information
Management
where
she
was
instrumental
in
development
of
an
electronic
health
record.
327
–
Clinical
Documentation
Optimization
Presenters:
Tania
Cutone,
Tammie
Profitko,
and
Bryanne
Winbourne
Organization:
Chilton
Hospital
and
Cornerstone
Advisors
Abstract:
Chilton
Hospital
defines
Clinical
Documentation
Optimization
as
the
process
of
identifying
opportunities
for
improvement
and
subsequently
developing
corrective
measures
which
offer
value
to
end-‐users,
improve
workflow,
and
enhance
outcomes.
This
presentation
is
designed
to
showcase
the
processes,
toolsets,
and
outcomes
which
have
resulted
from
the
Clinical
Documentation
Optimization
efforts
at
Chilton
Hospital.
This
presentation
will
highlight
improvements
in
the
documentation
screens,
as
well
as
enhancements
to
workflow
and
clinical
processes.
A
project
team
was
formed
to
evaluate
current
documentation
screens
via
end-‐user
interviews
and
analysis.
Specific
data
points
were
evaluated
during
end-‐user
interviews
to
identify
how
screens
could
be
redesigned
to
improve
documentation
and
more
adequately
support
workflow
while
reducing
time
and
keystrokes
per
assessment.
As
a
result
of
these
performance
improvement
efforts,
Chilton
redesigned
their
clinical
documentation
change
management
process.
The
revised
change
management
process
relies
on
input
and
subsequent
approval
from
multiple
groups,
including
the
Nursing
Informatics
department,
Clinical
Super
Users’
Council,
and
the
Nursing
Informatics
Council
(NIC).
Each
of
these
group’s
roles
and
functions
will
be
highlighted
as
we
demonstrate
the
importance
of
the
change
management
process
to
ensure
integrity,
consistency,
and
buy-‐in.
Once
optimization
opportunities
were
identified,
approved,
and
implemented,
reassessments
were
performed
post-‐LIVE
to
validate
and
measure
(quantify)
the
value
of
the
improvements.
Additionally,
end-‐user
competency
testing
has
evolved
to
be
a
significant
component
of
the
performance
improvement
process
and
as
such
is
performed
on
an
annual
basis
to
ensure
adequate
understanding
and
adoption
of
important
system
and
workflow
changes.
Tania
Cutone
RN
,
Nurse
Manager
-‐
Nursing
Informatics,
Chilton
Hospital
Tammie
Profitko
,
ACS
Systems
Analyst,
Chilton
Hospital
Bryanne
Winbourne,
Cornerstone
Advisors
Consultant
328
–
HIPAA
5010
–
Don't
Be
Left
Behind
–
The
Deadline
is
Approaching
Presenter:
Barbara
DaRosa
Organization:
CSC
Abstract:
The
final
countdown
for
the
5010/ICD-‐10
implementation
and
testing
has
begun.
By
January
2012
healthcare
organizations
must
have
all
the
HIPAA
5010
Compliance
testing
completed.
However,
many
studies
show
that
most
healthcare
organizations
have
not
even
begun
to
put
a
test
plan
together.
Can
these
organizations
still
complete
the
necessary
testing
before
time
runs
out?
Even
with
all
the
talk
and
forewarning
of
the
HIPAA
5010
testing
deadline,
many
healthcare
organizations
do
not
believe
this
deadline
of
January
2012
is
a
firm
one.
Many
hospitals
are
still
in
denial
that
this
deadline
will
be
upon
them
very
soon.
A
large
percentage
of
hospitals
have
taken
the
approach
that
if
testing
has
not
been
done
by
all
healthcare
organizations
then
the
deadline
will
be
pushed
out.
Nothing
could
be
further
from
the
truth.
January
2012
is
only
months
away
and
for
those
healthcare
organizations
who
have
not
completed
the
necessary
testing
–
the
results
could
mean
a
reimbursement
catastrophe!
It
is
NOT
too
late
to
start
this
testing
process
but
an
expedited
approach
must
be
taken.
A
team
devoted
to
solely
the
testing
and
implementation
of
the
HIPAA
5010
and
ICD-‐10
codes
must
be
established.
Three
separate
portions
of
the
project
need
to
be
addressed:
Assessment
&
Recommendation
Phase:
• Gap
Analysis
and
Impact
Analysis
• 4010-‐5010
&
5010-‐4010
Mapping
Changes
must
be
noted
• Risk
and
Mitigation
Plan
and
Project
Plan
Creation
Implementation
Phase:
• HIPAA
validation
assets
• Mapping
components
• ICD10
Cross
walk
• Pre-‐built
wrappers
• Data
Repository
Entry
(creation
of
new
business
rules
and
routing
processes)
Testing
Phase:
• HIPAA
Validation
testing
• Functional
Testing
• Integrating
Testing
• Trading
partner
set
up
and
testing
This
theory
is
not
reinventing
the
wheel.
However,
in
order
to
get
a
hospital
on
track
and
in
the
midst
of
the
testing
phase,
a
dedicated
staff
and
experienced
project
manager
will
be
required
need
to
devote
100%
of
their
time
to
the
efforts
of
HIPAA
5010.
The
deadline
is
coming
–
do
not
miss
it!
Barbara
DaRosa,
CSC
Health
Delivery
Integration
Team,
has
worked
with
multiple
vendors
–
CSC,
MEDITECH,
Eclipsys
–
and
was
a
self-‐employed
consultant.
She
has
been
employed
with
healthcare
organizations
and
financial
organizations
throughout
the
east
coast.
Barbara
currently
resides
in
Massachusetts
with
her
husband
and
two
children.
They
are
very
involved
with
youth
sporting
organizations
and
have
created
multiple
pieces
of
baseball
equipment
that
will
enhance
safety
for
children.
We
are
currently
working
with
the
Little
League
organization
in
an
attempt
to
further
promote
children's
safety.
329
–
Care
Plans
in
the
EMR
Presenter:
Katey
Ortlieb
Organization:
Beacon
Partners
Abstract:
Are
you
in
a
Care
Plan
conundrum?
Creating
meaningful,
valuable
care
plans
in
an
electronic
medical
record
presents
many
challenges.
Often
times,
clinicians
feel
the
care
plans
is
“another
task
to
complete”
or
“just
something
else
I
have
to
do.”
This
session
is
meant
to
address
those
challenges
and
offer
recommendations
for
improvement/creation
of
care
plans
in
MEDITECH.
Key
points
of
the
session
include:
• Reconciling
your
organization’s
definition
of
a
care
plan
with
the
definition
of
regulatory
bodies
• Identifying
the
purpose
of
the
care
plan.
What
do
you
want
from
your
care
plan?
What
purpose
do
you
want
it
to
serve?
• Discussion
of
various
languages
to
use
to
create
your
care
plans
• Involving
end-‐users
in
the
improvement
process
• Innovative
ways
to
use
the
dictionaries
in
MEDITECH
to
create
a
care
plan
that
is
valuable
to
the
patient
and
staff
• Making
the
care
plan
interdisciplinary
• Meeting
regulatory
requirements
in
regards
to
care
planning
• A
roadmap
-‐
To
get
you
where
you
want
to
be!
Katey
Ortlieb
is
a
registered
nurse
with
eight
years
of
healthcare
experience.
Her
clinical
experience
in
the
areas
of
pediatrics,
obstetrics
and
neonatal
care
has
instilled
in
her
an
understanding
of
the
workflow
of
the
care
provider
at
the
bedside.
Ms.
Ortlieb
possesses
practical
and
technical
experience
with
multiple
MEDITECH
Client
Server
applications,
including
Patient
Care
System
(PCS),
electronic
medication
administration
record
(eMAR),
Computerized
Physician
Order
Entry
(CPOE),
and
Electronic
Medical
Record
(EMR).
She
has
an
in-‐depth
knowledge
of
hospital
workflows
and
requirements
and
possesses
a
true
sense
of
the
needs
of
the
bedside
care
provider
in
regards
to
technology.
Prior
to
joining
Beacon
Partners
she
served
as
a
Documentation
Specialist
and
Informatics
Nurse
within
a
six-‐facility
healthcare
system
providing
acute,
rehabilitative,
hospice
and
long-‐term
care.
Some
highlights
from
her
career
include
involvement
in
a
health
system’s
conversion
from
MEDITECH
Magic
to
Client-‐Server
5.62,
providing
physician
support
during
the
implementation
of
CPOE,
and
system
optimization
for
the
PCS
module
in
multiple
organizations.
Katey
currently
works
for
Beacon
Partners,
a
healthcare
management
consulting
firm,
and
resides
in
Black
Hawk,
SD.
330
–
Guide
to
User
Provisioning
in
6.0
Presenter:
Lucy
Nelson
Organization:
Beacon
Partners
Abstract:
The
journey
to
designing
appropriate
access
for
users
in
MEDITECH
Version
6.x
is
complex
and
user
friendly
at
the
same
time.
The
ease
of
design
puts
a
misleading
face
on
the
complex
pieces
needed
to
create
access.
Understanding
the
new
Menu
Procedure
Access
(MPA)
as
a
common
portal
for
access
to
both
NPR
and
Focus
applications
that
are
built
in
6.x
can
turn
a
frustrating,
tedious
challenge
for
the
person
designing
access
into
a
well-‐organized
walk
in
the
park!
It
is
essential
to
have
a
grasp
of
the
layers
and
integrated
pieces
that
govern
access.
MEDITECH
has
beautifully
designed
desktops
for
each
application
that
facilitates
access
to
other
applications
and
processes
the
User
needs
to
maximize
their
work
flow.
This
ease
of
use
comes
to
an
abrupt
end
if
the
users
have
not
been
assigned
to
the
Access
Groups
and
Person
Profiles
that
allow
them
to
use
the
functionality
on
the
desktops.
This
session
will
provide
a
preview
of
the
new
integrated
desktops
and
a
clear
demonstration
of
the
multiple
levels
and
pieces
needed
to
create
appropriate
access
for
end
users.
Pre-‐tested
tools
used
for
implementations
will
be
shared
and
we
will
demonstrate
how
to
approach
and
set-‐up
simple
and
complex
MPAs.
Lucy
Nelson
is
an
experienced
healthcare
professional,
with
over
25
years
in
the
industry.
She
is
an
RN
with
over
ten
years
of
MEDITECH
experience;
Magic,
Client
Server
and
6.0
platforms.
She
has
recently
worked
on
a
Client-‐Server
6.0
implementation
build
as
the
User
Provisioning
Analyst.
Her
MEDITECH
6.x
experience
also
includes
OM
Team
Lead
for
a
Magic
to
6.0
Conversion/Implementation
and
hands-‐on
end
user
support
for
several
6.0
go-‐lives
that
included
PCS,
e-‐Mar
BMV,
PCM
and
CPOE.
Ms.
Nelson
is
currently
working
as
a
Consultant
for
Beacon
Partners,
adding
her
many
years
of
experience
as
a
clinician
and
educator
to
the
considerable
group
of
MEDITECH
Specialists
on
their
roster.
She
has
been
working
in
a
variety
of
roles
with
the
MEDITECH
software
from
End-‐User
to
Team
Lead
and
Project
Management.
331
–
Tracking
I.T.
Hardware
through
MM
Equipment
Management
Presenter:
Charles
Spurgeon
Organization:
Beacon
Partners
Abstract:
Tracking
Information
Technology
hardware
within
medical
facilities,
large
or
small,
can
be
a
challenge.
This
presentation
will
examine
opportunities
for
I.T.
departments
to
accomplish
this
task
by
utilizing
MM
Equipment
Management
routines.
Participants
will
learn
approaches
on
developing
Equipment
Management
Dictionaries
and
Customer-‐Defined
screens
to
enter
hardware
information.
In
addition,
the
presentation
will
include
an
illustration
of
how
standard
and
NPR
Reports
can
be
used
to
manage
maintenance
of
computers,
printers,
scanners,
and
other
I.T.
related
equipment
within
a
healthcare
facility.
A
question
and
answer
session
will
follow
the
presentation,
as
time
permits.
Handouts
of
covered
materials
will
be
provided.
Chuck
Spurgeon
is
a
Senior
Consultant
with
Beacon
Partners.
He
has
extensive
experience
implementing
and
supporting
the
MEDITECH
General
Financial
modules.
His
background
includes
both
Client
Server
and
Magic
platforms
at
both
stand-‐alone
healthcare
facilities
and
large
hospital
networks.
He
also
is
an
intermediate-‐level
NPR
Report
Writer
who
has
worked
on
many
projects
in
this
area,
including
revenue
cycle,
departmental
audits,
and
system
conversions.
332
–
ARRA
&
Physician
Documentation
in
the
Clinic
Setting
Presenter:
Donna
Perry
Organization:
Beacon
Partners
Abstract:
As
ARRA
deadlines
loom,
many
clinics
are
rushing
to
convert
to
electronic
records.
Although
physicians
may
be
familiar
with
using
electronic
documentation
and
ordering
within
the
hospital
setting,
they
may
still
be
using
paper
methods
for
day
to
day
documentation
and
record
management
within
the
clinic.
Reasons
for
this
lag
are
many,
however
a
common
challenge
is
the
sheer
complexity
of
clinic
operations
coupled
with
a
lack
of
resources
that
are
able
to
understand
and
assist
with
the
transition.
In
this
interactive
session,
the
audience
will
examine
the
processes
of
a
theoretical
Internal
Medicine
clinic
and
discuss
what
type
of
preparation
will
be
needed
for
a
conversion
to
an
electronic
record.
Audience
members
will
gain
an
understanding
of
process
evaluation
that
can
be
used
to
help
prepare
their
own
clinics
for
a
paper
to
electronic
conversion.
Donna
Perry,
R.N.,
has
been
fortunate
to
be
able
to
work
in
the
medical
profession
for
over
30
years.
Her
clinical
experience
includes
critical
care,
emergency
medicine,
surgery
and
ambulatory
care.
She
has
also
worked
as
an
education
specialist,
a
clinic
manager
and
informatics
nurse.
As
a
Beacon
Partners
Senior
Consultant,
Donna
enjoys
helping
people
design
the
processes
needed
to
support
an
ambulatory
record.
334
–
Inspiring
Reporting
Options
in
the
World
of
6.0
Presenter:
Glen
D'Abate
Organization:
Acmeware,
Inc.
Abstract:
If
you
are
preparing
to
implement
MEDITECH
version
6.0,
there
are
unique
ad-‐hoc
report
development
challenges
that
will
need
to
be
addressed.
The
NPR
Report
Writer
is
not
capable
of
accessing
MEDITECH
Advanced
Technologies
(M-‐AT)
based
applications
data
(i.e.
advanced
clinical
–
PCS/EDM/OM
/ARM)
for
ad-‐hoc
reports.
The
newly
developed
6.0
Report
Designer
ad-‐hoc
reporting
application
does
not
contain
the
robust
development
toolset
found
in
NPR
RW
and
has
efficiency
limitation
when
accessing
the
older
NPR
data
structures.
Filling
this
void
is
the
Data
Repository
(DR)
SQL
Server
database
application
which
provides
a
platform
for
efficient
ad-‐hoc
report
development
using
all
NPR-‐based
and
M-‐AT-‐based
application
data
in
6.0.
This
session
will
provide
a
high
level
review
of
ad-‐hoc
report
development
tools
that
are
available
for
free
as
part
of
your
MEDITECH
DR,
Microsoft
SQL
Server
Database
implementation.
We
will
review
three
distinct
interactive
development
environments:
1. Analysis
Services
–
Where
significant
initial
development
work
is
required
to
configure
an
ad-‐
hoc,
web-‐based
reporting
environment
and
little
or
no
training
is
required
for
end
users
to
analyze,
review,
and
manipulate
numeric
report
data
(e.g.,
totals,
counts,
averages,
etc.).
2. Report
Model/Report
Builder
–
Where
significant
initial
development
work
is
required
to
configure
an
ad-‐hoc,
web-‐based
reporting
environment
and
minimal
training
is
required
for
non-‐technical
staff
to
develop
ad-‐hoc
reports
including;
selecting
report
output
columns,
filtering
data,
aggregation,
layout,
format,
input
parameters
and
more.
3. Report
Server
Projects
(in
Visual
Studio)
–
Where
technical
staff
can
develop
highly
sophisticated,
full-‐featured,
web-‐based
reports
with
access
to
all
of
the
technical
capabilities
of
the
Microsoft
Visual
Studio
interactive
development
environment
This
session
will
provide
an
overview
of
the
pros
and
cons
of
each
of
these
Microsoft
Report
development
technologies
in
the
context
and
unique
configuration
of
the
MEDITECH
DR
environment.
Anyone
interested
in
learning
more
about
ad-‐hoc
report
development
in
the
MEDITECH
6.0
world
should
consider
attending
this
session.
Glen
D’Abate
is
founder
and
President
of
Acmeware,
Inc.
Glen
has
25
years
of
experience
working
in
the
healthcare
IT
field
including
13
years
at
MEDITECH
where
he
led
development
of
the
Data
Repository
(DR)
application.
Under
Glen’s
guidance,
Acmeware
has
earned
a
reputation
as
a
leader
in
DR
consulting
field
and
is
recognized
for
developing
innovative
DR-‐based
reporting,
custom
application,
and
interfacing
solutions.
He
has
also
developed
a
DR
report
writing
training
program
that
has
been
attended
by
participants
from
dozens
of
DR
sites.
Glen
has
an
undergraduate
degree
in
Engineering
and
Economics
from
Trinity
College
and
graduate
degrees
in
Biomedical
Engineering
and
in
Finance
from
R.P.I.
and
Boston
College.
335
–
Meeting
“Meaningful
Use”
in
the
Community
Hospital:
A
MEDITECH
Client
Server
5.64
and
6.0
Experience
Presenters:
Mary
Jo
Nimmo,
Edward
Ricks,
and
James
D'itri
Organization:
Lenoir
Memorial
Hospital,
Beaufort
Memorial
Hospital,
and
CSC
Abstract:
This
topic
will
dispel
the
myth
that
community
hospitals
cannot
satisfy
the
"meaningful
use"
in
a
timely
manner.
In
fact,
the
topic
will
show
that
small
community
hospitals
in
many
ways
are
better
positioned
to
comply
with
the
"meaningful
use"
criteria
by
careful
planning
and
understanding
what
steps
to
take.
We
will
explore
the
efforts
of
Lenoir
Memorial
Hospital,
a
261-‐bed
acute
care
hospital
located
in
rural
North
Carolina
and
Beaufort
Memorial,
a
197-‐bed
acute
care
hospital
in
South
Carolina.
We
will
provide
an
example
of
what
two
small
community
hospital
can
and
should
do
to
achieve
compliance,
linking
the
more
general,
conceptual
content
of
the
introductory
part
of
the
topic
with
an
actual
setting
that
is
closing
in
on
achieving
compliance.
Lenoir
Memorial
launched
its
planning
efforts
regarding
"meaningful
use"
in
late
2009
and
is
tracking
toward
compliance
by
2012.
Beaufort
made
the
decision
to
convert
from
Magic
to
MEDITECH's
6.0
platform,
going
Live
in
March
of
this
year,
and
will
meet
“meaningful
use”
compliance
in
2011.
Through
both
hospitals,
we
will
share
with
the
attendees
the
steps
being
taken
to
achieve
compliance,
the
economics
of
the
pursuit
and
key
"lessons
learned"
from
the
efforts
to
date.
The
topic
will
close
with
a
recap
of
the
major
points
discussed
throughout
the
presentation
followed
by
a
question/answer
period.
Mary
Jo
Nimmo,
RN
MSN
has
over
30
years
of
experience
that
includes
patient
care
delivery,
nursing
management,
quality
management
and
IS
Department
management.
For
the
past
ten
years,
she
has
been
the
Director
of
Management
Information
Systems
at
Lenoir
Memorial
Hospital
in
Kinston,
NC
where
she
has
led
the
total
replacement
of
the
organization's
information
systems
and
is
currently
spearheading
the
hospital's
pursuit
of
HITECH
"meaningful
use"
compliance.
Ms.
Nimmo
holds
a
BSN
degree
from
the
Medical
University
of
South
Carolina
and
a
Master’s
degree
from
East
Carolina
University
and
sits
on
various
State
IT
Committees.
Edward
D.
Ricks,
MHA,
CPHIMS,
CHPS,
is
the
Vice
President
of
Information
Services
and
Chief
Information
Officer
for
Beaufort
Memorial
Hospital
in
Beaufort,
SC.
Prior
to
joining
Beaufort
Memorial
in
2008
he
filled
the
same
role
for
Samaritan
Medical
Center
in
Watertown,
NY.
Ed
has
over
twenty
years
of
health
care
information
systems
experience,
with
the
last
nine
years
at
a
senior
level.
Ed
earned
a
Bachelor
of
Science
degree
in
computer
science
from
Central
Michigan
University
in
Mt.
Pleasant,
Michigan
and
a
Master
of
Health
Administration
degree
from
the
University
of
North
Carolina
in
Chapel
Hill.
For
the
eighth
year
in
a
row,
Beaufort
Memorial
Hospital
was
named
one
of
the
nation's
Most
Wired
Hospitals
according
to
the
2010
Most
Wired
Survey
and
Benchmarking
Study
printed
in
the
July
issue
of
Hospitals
&
Health
Networks
magazine.
James
D'itri,
MM
is
a
Partner
in
CSC's
Healthcare
IT
Strategy
group
with
33
years
of
experience
spanning
IT
strategy,
selection,
and
implementation
and
related
consulting
services.
His
clients
include
organizations
large
and
small,
from
academic
medical
centers
and
integrated
delivery
systems
to
small
community
hospitals
and
critical
access
hospitals.
He
holds
a
Bachelor
of
Science
degree
in
Electrical
Engineering
from
Princeton
University
and
a
Master
of
Management
degree
from
Northwestern
University's
Kellogg
School
with
majors
in
Health
Services
Management,
Accounting
and
Management
Information
Systems.
He
has
lectured
at
several
universities
and
has
spoken
at
a
variety
of
local
and
national
forums.
336
–
Affiliate
Physician
Strategies:
Using
Information
Technology
to
Earn
Loyalty
Presenter:
Robert
J
Schwartz,
M.D
Organization:
Dearborn
Advisors,
LLC
Abstract:
Most
facilities
find
themselves
in
a
competitive
environment
and
struggle
with
the
best
methods
to
work
with
their
provider
communities.
There
are
many
intrinsic
and
external
pressures
on
the
fragile
provider-‐health
system
relationship
that
can
result
in
fewer
patients
for
the
health
system
and
strained
relationships.
Commonly,
relationships
with
referring
providers
and
the
medical
staff
is
defaulted
to
the
physicians
themselves
or
delegated
to
one
or
two
individuals
who
are
not
integrated
into
the
executive
or
clinical
environment.
Quality
of
care
initiatives
are
now
common
and
most
are
successful,
resulting
in
difficulty
in
identifying
clear
market
leaders
at
a
regional
level.
Differentiation
then
requires
additional
strategies
that
create
a
competitive
advantage
for
the
hospital
and
this
can
be
obtained
by
borrowing
from
the
hotel,
entertainment
and
aviation
industries.
Customer
Relationship
Management
(CRM)
has
been
adapted
to
the
health
care
environment
-‐
termed
Provider
Relationship
Management
(PRM)
-‐
and
has
demonstrated
support
of
quality
care
initiatives,
multi-‐year
increases
in
referrals
and
increased
revenue.
The
presentation
will
start
with
lessons
learned
from
other
industries
excelling
at
CRM,
addressing
the
adjustments
necessary
for
the
health
care
environment.
The
next
part
will
be
a
case
study
of
a
successful
program
that
dramatically
increased
referrals
and
provided
many
unplanned
benefits
from
the
implemented
components.
The
focus
will
be
on
the
technology
components
of
Health
Information
Exchanges
(HIE),
Decision
Support
and
Messaging
Technologies.
It
will
conclude
by
identifying
the
key
components
in
this
model
of
PRM
and
some
lessons
learned.
Robert
J
Schwartz,
M.D.,
M.P.H.;
Physician
Executive
has
more
than
25
years
of
clinical
experience.
Prior
to
joining
Dearborn
Advisors
in
2009,
Dr.
Schwartz
served
as
Vice
President
and
Medical
Director
of
Referring
Physician
Relations
at
the
University
of
Pittsburgh
Medical
Center
(UPMC).
He
was
responsible
for
maintaining
relationships
with
more
than
4,000
community
and
referring
physicians.
While
there,
he
conceived,
developed
and
implemented
an
innovative
quality
of
service
strategy,
creating
excellence
in
access,
information
sharing
and
service
recovery.
At
UPMC,
his
ideas
and
operations
created
a
new
approach
to
physician
loyalty
(i.e.,
earning
their
loyalty),
contributed
to
patient
safety
through
clinical
messaging,
and
created
a
measurable
reduction
in
legal
risk
by
bridging
the
gap
between
hospital
and
community
providers
by
treating
them
as
valued
customers.
This
work
led
to
Dr.
Schwartz
being
recognized
as
the
2006
Microsoft
Healthcare
Users
Group,
Clinician
of
the
Year
and
2003
Innovations
Award
from
the
Hospital
Association
of
Pennsylvania.
337
–
ICD-‐10
and
MEDITECH:
All
Aboard?
Presenter:
Bob
Witkop
Organization:
CTG
Healthcare
Solutions
Abstract:
Healthcare
Organizations
are
focused
on
implementing
core
pieces
of
technology
and
processes
that
will
enable
them
to
meet
ICD-‐10
milestones.
Stabilizing
clinical
and
revenue
cycle
system/processes
are
key
components
to
minimizing
the
impact
on
revenue
streams
under
the
new
legislation.
Explore
with
CTGHS
how
MEDITECH
organizations
are
accommodating
these
requirements
with
deadlines
looming.
This
session
will
provide
an
overview
of
legislated
changes
and
their
intent
along
with
key
dates
and
core
MEDITECH
processes
and
system
changes
for
each
platform.
Specific
focus
areas
will
highlight
the
impact
to
your
organizations
clinical
and
revenue
cycle
processes
as
you
steam
towards
mandatory
compliance
deadlines!
Bob
Witkop
is
currently
a
Delivery
Manger
with
CTGHS
and
has
over
14
years
of
Healthcare
Experience
in
Project
Management,
Revenue
Cycle
Management,
Operational
Assessments,
Implementations/Upgrades/Conversions,
and
Process
Optimizations
relating
to
medical
software
within
multi-‐facility
corporate
organizations,
single
standing
acute
care
hospitals,
long-‐term
acute
care
facilities,
home
health,
and
national
physician
billing
environments.
Bob
has
completed
projects
in
functional
consulting
positions
with
Admissions,
Medical
Records,
Coding,
Business
Office,
Materials
Management,
Accounts
Payable,
General
Accounting,
Physician
Billing
and
Information
Technology
departments.
338
–
TAR
or:
How
I
Learned
to
Stop
Worrying
and
Love
the
Automated
Transfusion
Record
Presenter:
Don
Newton
Organization:
CTG
Healthcare
Solutions
Abstract:
In
this
session
we
will
look
at
TAR
(Transfusion
Administration
Record)
from
a
Blood
Bank
perspective
including
the
“art”
of
letting
go
or
current
transfusion
practices
and
trusting
the
automated
system.
We
will
also
look
at
the
features
of
TAR
for
the
patient,
the
lab
and
the
clinical
staff.
We'll
include
considerations
for
6.0
and
real
world
experiences.
Don
is
a
Medical
Technologist
with
over
30
years
of
generalist
experience.
A
former
Laboratory
Director
and
Vice-‐President
of
Clinical
Operations,
Don
has
been
working
as
a
consultant
for
the
past
five
years.
Proficient
in
both
MEDITECH
and
Cerner,
he
has
worked
with
both
single
and
multi-‐site
facilities.
Don
is
currently
working
on
an
enterprise
roll-‐out
of
MEDITECH
6.0.
Don
is
married
to
the
lovely
Christine.
They
have
three
children,
girls
16
and
14
and
a
son
12.
When
not
traveling
for
work.
Don
likes
to
travel
with
his
family,
cook
and
play
guitar
in
his
classic
rock,
blues,
funk
band:
Random
Play.
339
–
MEDITECH
CS
5.6
or
6.0
–
What’s
the
Difference?
Presenter:
Debbie
Martin
Organization:
Dearborn
Advisors,
LLC
Abstract:
There
has
been
much
speculation
and
discussion
about
MEDITECH
Client
Server
Version
5.6
and
6.0
and
what
it
means
to
the
end-‐user.
Both
C/S
5.6.4
Electronic
Health
Record
(EHR)
and
6.0
Health
Care
Information
System
(HCIS)
version
6.05
EHR
have
received
CCHITEHR
inpatient
certification.
But
what
are
the
differences?
This
session
will
provide
a
high-‐level
overview
of
each
version
across
multiple
applications,
with
a
focus
on
similarities
and
differences
between
the
two.
Functionality
and
integration
will
be
discussed,
as
will
identification
of
major
process
redesign
opportunities
and/or
requirements.
Comparison
to
more
familiar
versions
(5.5
and
below)
will
be
made,
when
helpful,
to
demonstrate
significant
changes.
Attendees
should
expect
to
leave
this
session
with
a
good
understanding
of
what
to
expect
as
they
look
forward
to
future
upgrades
or
implementation
of
the
latest
products.
This
presentation
is
ideal
for
those
who
are
considering
migration
to
6.0.
Debbie
Martin,
Director,
has
more
than
35
years
of
experience
in
health
care,
25
of
which
have
focused
on
health
care
information
technology
design
and
implementation.
She
has
a
broad
range
of
clinical
applications
implementation
and
management
experience,
along
with
depth
of
knowledge
in
systems
design
and
healthcare
operations.
Ms.
Martin’s
diverse
background
includes
implementation
of
integrated
Laboratory,
Radiology,
Pharmacy,
Nursing,
Order
Entry,
Appointment
Scheduling,
Enterprise
Medical
Record,
Emergency
Department,
Operating
Room
Management
and
Provider
Order
Management
applications
in
various-‐sized
facilities.
In
addition,
she
has
extensive
experience
in
software
testing,
staff
training
and
team
leadership.
She
specializes
in
MEDITECH
Magic,
Client
Server
and
6.0
products
and
has
experience
with
multiple
third-‐party
software
solutions
and
interfaces
with
various
clinical
vendors.
Ms.
Martin
also
has
experience
in
the
build
and
management
of
MEDITECH’s
Corporate
Management
System
in
complex
multi-‐facility
environments.
340
–
A
Day
in
the
Life
–
A
6.0
Real-‐time
Demonstration
Presenters:
Jeff
Battles
and
Debbie
Martin
Organization:
St.
Bernards
Medical
Center
and
Dearborn
Advisors
Abstract:
This
is
an
opportunity
to
see
MEDITECH
6.0
in
a
true
hospital
environment.
St.
Bernards
Hospital
in
Jonesboro,
Arkansas
has
been
Live
with
MEDITECH
6.0
for
more
than
a
year.
The
session
will
take
you
through
a
typical
patient
day
and
include
real-‐time
demonstration
of
basic
functions
within
EDM,
ADM,
OM,
PHA,
ITS,
LAB,
PCS,
eMAR,
PCM
and
EMR.
The
focus
will
be
on
integration,
documentation
and
clinical
data
presentation
to
physicians
and
other
clinicians.
Time
for
questions
and
answers
will
be
allowed
following
the
demonstration.
This
presentation
is
ideal
for
those
who
scheduled
for,
or
considering,
migration
to
6.0.
Jeff
Battles,
RN,
is
in
Information
Services
at
St.
Bernards
Medical
Center
in
Jonesboro,
AR.
He
has
13
years
of
experience
in
health
care
working
in
the
Lab,
Emergency
Department
and
as
Manager
of
a
40-‐
bed
Orthopedics
Department.
As
part
of
a
MEDITECH
6.0
implementation,
Jeff
transitioned
to
the
Medical
Centers
Information
Services
Clinical
Applications
Department,
where
he
has
worked
for
the
past
two
years.
His
specialty
applications
are
the
Patient
Care
System,
Order
Management
and
Enterprise
Medical
Record.
He
also
works
closely
with
the
Emergency
Department,
Laboratory
and
Pharmacy
modules.
He
has
experience
with
staff
training
and
with
MEDITECH-‐related,
third-‐party
vendors.
Debbie
Martin,
Director,
has
more
than
35
years
of
experience
in
health
care,
25
of
which
have
focused
on
health
care
information
technology
design
and
implementation.
She
has
a
broad
range
of
clinical
applications
implementation
and
management
experience,
along
with
depth
of
knowledge
in
systems
design
and
healthcare
operations.
Ms.
Martin’s
diverse
background
includes
implementation
of
integrated
Laboratory,
Radiology,
Pharmacy,
Nursing,
Order
Entry,
Appointment
Scheduling,
Enterprise
Medical
Record,
Emergency
Department,
Operating
Room
Management
and
Provider
Order
Management
applications
in
various-‐sized
facilities.
In
addition,
she
has
extensive
experience
in
software
testing,
staff
training
and
team
leadership.
She
specializes
in
MEDITECH
Magic,
Client
Server
and
6.0
products
and
has
experience
with
multiple
third-‐party
software
solutions
and
interfaces
with
various
clinical
vendors.
Ms.
Martin
also
has
experience
in
the
build
and
management
of
MEDITECH’s
Corporate
Management
System
in
complex
multi-‐facility
environments.
341
–
MEDITECH
Systems
Update
2011
Presenter:
James
Fitzgerald
Organization:
Dell
Services
Abstract:
MEDITECH
is
evolving
quickly
to
continue
to
provide
patient,
physician
and
hospital
information
systems
that
help
healthcare
organizations
achieve
their
mission
of
improving
the
quality
and
delivery
of
healthcare
within
their
communities.
As
MEDITECH’s
customers
ride
this
“power
curve”
to
achieve
a
full
continuum
of
care
with
interoperability
and
meaningful
use,
the
underlying
systems
and
technologies
must
adapt
to
changes
in
the
MEDITECH
software
as
well
as
changes
in
the
regulatory
environment.
This
pragmatic
discussion
reviews
some
of
this
year’s
technology
changes
in
MEDITECH’s
offering,
incremental
adjustments
hospitals
can
make
to
take
advantage
of
those
changes,
and
ways
to
plan
successfully
for
the
future.
Topics
covered
specifically
as
they
relate
to
MEDITECH’s
offering
will
include
encryption
of
data,
archiving,
the
growing
use
of
data
repositories
and
warehouses,
interoperability,
virtual
desktops,
and
new
disaster
recovery
methodologies.
James
J.
Fitzgerald
is
the
Chief
Technology
Officer,
MEDITECH
Solutions
Group
within
Dell
Services.
In
a
25+
year
career
he
has
held
staff
and
executive
roles
in
sales,
marketing,
and
product
management
in
various
companies.
Jim
was
product
manager
of
Microcom’s
ground-‐breaking
AX
and
HDMS
series
error-‐
correcting
network
modems,
which
paved
the
way
for
the
early
days
of
dial-‐up
Internet
service.
Since
2001,
Jim
has
served
as
CTO
of
the
MEDITECH
Solutions
Group
(formerly
JJWild)
which
was
acquired
by
Perot
Systems
Corporation
in
2007.
Jim
has
been
an
integral
part
of
the
network,
systems,
and
storage
technology
design
team
for
over
400
hospitals
using
the
MEDITECH
Healthcare
Information
System,
and
has
envisioned
and
shepherded
the
creation
of
a
solutions
portfolio.
Jim’s
current
focus
is
on
expanding
the
benefits
of
virtualized
servers,
clients,
and
networks
to
the
healthcare
community
and
working
with
his
colleagues
at
MEDITECH
to
drive
towards
zero
downtime
healthcare
information
systems.
342
–
MEDITECH
Magic
to
MEDITECH
6.0
Migration
–
The
Magnitude
of
New
Features,
Conversions,
and
Rebuilding
that
You
Need
to
Find
Out
Before
you
Start
Name:
Ed
Ricks
and
Nathia
Karasch
Organization:
Beaufort
Memorial
Hospital
and
Summit
Healthcare
Abstract:
Migrating
from
MEDITECH
MAGIC
to
MEDITECH
6.x
essentially
requires
the
same
time
and
resources
as
a
new
installation.
This
discussion
will
provide
insight
to
the
magnitude
of
this
type
of
project
which
requires
thorough
and
thoughtful
preparation
and
planning
prior
to
the
installation
in
order
to
have
any
chance
of
meeting
the
scheduled
Go
Live
Date.
Beaufort
Memorial
Hospital
recently
migrated
from
MAGIC
to
MEDITECH
6.0
and
replaced
multiple
third-‐party
vendor
applications
interfaces
with
new
interfaces.
We
would
like
to
share
our
experiences
with
you
around
the
"gotcha's"
that
Beaufort
Memorial
and
other
early
migration
hospitals
discovered
and
share
how
our
experiences
can
help
you
navigate
through
these
obstacles
so
that
you
do
not
put
your
Go
Live
date
at
risk.
Topics
reviewed
in
this
discussion
include:
• New
features
to
learn
and
understand,
such
as
server
less
integrated
backups,
role-‐base
desktops,
UPT
and
more.
• Areas
to
focus
on
sooner
than
later
such
as:
o PC's
Naming
Conventions
o Review
Existing
Customs
(Determine
if
they
are
standard
in
Focus)
o CDS’
(identify
which
queries
used
last
and
setup
naming
conventions)
o Printing
Process
o Conversions
(MPI,
ITS,..)
o Interfaces
(identify
all
Interfaces
and
dataflow)
o Dictionary
Build
(new
dictionaries
didn't
exist
in
Magic
and
using
(Scripts
to
streamline
with
UPT)
o Downtime
(Policies
/
Procedures)
o PCI
–
Link
(Historical
–
non
converted
Data)
o Testing
Processes
(Unit,
Integrated,
Parallel)
Edward
D.
Ricks,
MHA,
CPHIMS,
CHPS,
is
the
Vice
President
of
Information
Services
and
Chief
Information
Officer
for
Beaufort
Memorial
Hospital
in
Beaufort,
SC.
Prior
to
joining
Beaufort
Memorial
in
2008
he
filled
the
same
role
for
Samaritan
Medical
Center
in
Watertown,
NY.
Ed
has
over
20
years
of
health
care
information
systems
experience,
with
the
last
nine
years
at
a
senior
level.
For
the
eighth
year
in
a
row,
Beaufort
Memorial
Hospital
was
named
one
of
the
nation’s
Most
Wired
Hospitals
according
to
the
2010
Most
Wired
Survey
and
Benchmarking
Study
printed
in
the
July
issue
of
Hospitals
&
Health
Networks
magazine.
Ed
is
a
member
of
HIMSS
and
CHIME.
Nathia
Karasch
is
Vice
President
of
software
engineering
and
client
services
at
Summit
Healthcare.
She
has
worked
at
Summit
for
over
seven
years
and
has
over
10
years
of
experience
in
healthcare
IT.
Nathia
is
an
expert
in
the
area
of
healthcare
interoperability
and
leads
a
team
of
engineers
to
deliver
a
wide
variety
of
integration
projects
including
HL7,
XML,
scripting
solutions,
custom
applications
and
solutions
that
include
web
service,
real-‐time
scripting
interfaces
and
custom
archive
installations
for
healthcare
organizations
in
the
US,
Canada
and
UK.
Nathia
has
specialized
in
the
past
two
years
on
the
MEDITECH
6.x
conversions
earning
a
reputation
for
this
focus.
She
specializes
on
XML
and
HL7
interface.
343
–
Who
Am
I
Today?
Understanding
the
Many
Facets
of
User
Provisioning
in
MEDITECH
6.0
for
Large
and
Small
Market
Hospitals
Presenter:
Rene
McKinnon
Organization:
Vitalize
Consulting
Solutions
Abstract:
With
the
integrations
of
the
MIS
user
Dictionary
and
the
MIS
Provider
Dictionaries,
and
the
addition
of
multiple
Roles
and
Facilities/Locations
in
the
new
MEDITECH
6.0
software,
user
provisioning
has
become
more
complex
and
versatile.
These
enhancements
to
the
system
enable
this
essential
User/Provider
build
to
take
place
in
one
area
regardless
of
the
size
of
the
hospital
market.
The
newly
integrated
dictionaries
allow
the
small
or
large
market
hospital
system
to
control
their
user
functionality,
appropriate
access,
provider
access
and
functionality
in
one
place.
The
system
now
provides
one
area
for
the
data
entry
and
maintenance
of
all
essential
user/provider
information.
Often
times
the
attention
is
placed
on
the
individual
modules
builds
and
people
lose
sight
of
the
importance
of
the
End
User
and
Provider
build,
this
newly
integrated
dictionary
build
directly
impacts
the
complete
system
usability.
During
this
hour
we
will
attempt
to
refocus
the
attentions
and
importance
of
User
Provisioning
while
increasing
the
attendee’s
knowledge
and
understanding.
The
presentation
will
provide
the
insight
for
the
preparation,
and
execution
of
this
build
for
a
hospital
system.
Focus
will
be
on:
• Preparation
needed
by
the
hospital
prior
to
the
start
of
the
project
•
How
to
utilize
different
tools
to
assist
with
the
build
for
the
entire
HCIS
•
The
Importance
of:
o Roles
o Profiles
o Access
groups:
Focus,
NPR
o MPA’s
(Menu’s
Provider
Access)
• Importance
of
incorporating
Physician/provider
Information
requirements
for
billing,
documentation,
and
regulatory
needs
in
the
initial
information
gathering
stages
• The
collaboration
with
the
project
teams
–
to
gather
the
needed
information
• Ways
to
avoid
re-‐work
or
rebuilding
of
dictionaries
• A
great
opportunity
to
clean-‐up
old
dictionary
build
mishaps
• The
importance
of
incorporating
the
new
user
functionality,
and
versatility
into
end
user
training
to
enhance
the
user
experience
• How
to
utilize
the
new
functionality
in
the
small
or
large
market
hospital
system
and
hopefully
keep
Provider
and
end
User
frustrations
at
a
minimum
•
Provide
helpful
guidelines
to
user
dictionary
maintenance
post
live,
what
happens
the
day
after
Rene
McKinnon
BS
RN,
is
a
Senior
Consultant
in
the
MEDITECH
Practice
at
Vitalize
Consulting
Solutions.
Rene
has
28
years
Clinical
Experience
years,
15
years
of
MEDITECH
experience
implementing,
and
supporting
various
modules
from
Magic
3.6
to
MEDITECH
6.0.
344
–
MEDITECH
6.0:
Lessons
Learned
Presenter:
Jan
Moore
Organization:
Dell
Services
Abstract:
There’s
no
doubt
that
MEDITECH
6.0
takes
the
proven
MEDITECH
HCIS
to
the
‘next
level’,
providing
significant
benefits
to
its
users.
At
the
same
time,
the
6.0
implementation
can
also
provide
critical
insights
into
process
change
and
system
integration
requirements
related
to
the
use
of
the
6.0
platform.
Join
us
for
a
discussion
of
lessons
learned
and
the
key
6.0
implementation
and
adoption
success
factors
from
both
an
application
and
a
technical
perspective.
We’ll
discuss
pre-‐implementation
planning
strategies,
such
as
tips
to
address
process
redesign;
important
technical
considerations,
including
those
specific
to
a
virtualized
system;
reports
analysis;
and
specific
MEDITECH
6.0
module
nuances.
We
will
share
our
experiences
garnered
from
providing
technology,
consulting,
and
advisory
services
to
many
organizations
that
are
planning
to
implement
or
have
implemented
6.0.
Benefit
from
our
library
of
“lessons
learned”
and
success
strategies.
And
come
share
your
thoughts
and
questions
as
well.
Jan
Moore
currently
serves
as
a
Director
of
Consulting
for
the
MEDITECH
Solutions
Group
within
Dell
Services’
Healthcare
Consulting
Practice.
She
is
a
seasoned
professional
with
over
35
years
in
the
healthcare
field.
Jan
has
managed
multiple
MEDITECH
implementations,
developed
healthcare
information
management
strategic
plans,
provided
interim
management
for
multiple
healthcare
organizations,
spearheaded
major
project
management
endeavors,
and
has
held
many
positions,
including
CIO
and
Vice
President.
Jan
has
been
with
Dell
Services
for
over
15
years.
During
that
time
she
has
served
in
multiple
capacities
including
business
development,
practice
management,
staff
management,
and
service
delivery.
She
has
been
able
to
develop
strong
business
relationships
over
the
course
of
her
career
and
is
considered
to
be
a
highly
regarded
senior
executive
in
the
healthcare
arena.
Prior
to
joining
Dell
Services,
Jan
served
as
the
CIO
at
two
MEDITECH
hospitals.
345
–
Migrating
from
MAGIC
to
6.0?
Understand
the
Integration
and
Functionality
between
the
OM/EMR
and
LAB
Applications
Presenter:
Nichole
Malone
Organization:
HealthNET
Systems
Consulting
Abstract:
In
the
early
stages
of
all
implementations,
it
is
crucial
to
understand
the
integration
between
all
applications
and
how
the
build
in
one
application
will
impact
the
functionality
of
all
connecting
applications.
Although
some
functionality
and
integration
is
the
same
in
the
MAGIC
platform
as
it
is
in
the
new
6.0
platform,
the
majority
has
changed
between
the
two
platforms.
The
perfect
example
can
be
seen
with
the
OM/EMR
and
LAB
applications.
This
session
will
reveal
the
major
changes
that
6.0
brings
to
the
OM/EMR
and
LAB
applications
from
functionality,
dictionary
build,
and
an
integration
standpoint.
Learn
about
the
impact
that
the
two
6.0
applications
have
on
each
other,
as
well
as
the
trouble
areas
sites
migrating
have
encountered.
Nichole
Malone,
a
consultant
with
HealthNET
Systems
Consulting,
has
worked
as
a
support
analyst
for
ancillary
and
clinical
applications,
and
has
served
as
a
LAB
implementation
specialist
for
both
single
and
multi-‐facility
Magic
to
6.0
migration
implementations.
Nichole’s
Healthcare
IT
experience
includes
working
with
ancillary
and
clinical
IT
assessments,
process
redesign,
training,
and
HCIS
selections.
346
–
Physician
Care
Manager
(CPOE,
MEDREC,
eRX,
PWM,
and
PDOC)
–
Navigating
Development
and
Optimization
Opportunities
Presenter:
Chad
Turner
Organization:
HealthNET
Systems
Consulting
Abstract:
From
maximizing
reimbursement
to
achieving
clinical
excellence
in
the
organization,
MEDITECH’s
Physician
Care
Manager
(PCM)
is
a
suite
of
products
with
incredible
benefit
to
the
organization
for
achieving
ARRA
and
clinical
excellence
goals.
Automating
processes,
designing
documentation
that
is
streamlined
and
efficient
for
physicians,
providing
clinical
decision
support,
and
assuring
data
flow
between
nursing
staff
and
physicians
in
both
the
ED
and
the
in-‐patient
setting
are
all
crucial
in
developing
an
optimal
system.
Come
see
how
your
organization
can
develop
PCM,
maximize
quality,
accomplish
Joint
Commission
goals,
and
develop
the
system
to
meet
Meaningful
Use
criteria
to
accomplish
financial
and
clinical
excellence.
This
session
will
cover
the
necessary
steps
of
planning
and
development,
the
importance
of
standardization,
and
implementation
strategies.
Key
topics
will
include:
Documentation
methodology,
nomenclature,
computerized
physician
order
entry
(CPOE),
ePrecribing
(eRX),
on-‐Line
medication
reconciliation
(MEDREC),
and
physician
on-‐line
documentation
(PDOC).
Technology,
clinician/physician
buy
in,
optimal
data
flow,
and
Clinical
Documentation
Improvement
Program
(CDIP)
development
will
also
be
discussed.
Chad
Turner
currently
serves
as
an
Advanced
Clinical
Specialist
at
HealthNET
Systems
Consulting,
Inc.
Chad
has
over
16
years
of
experience
in
Healthcare
IT
that
includes
project
management,
IT
planning,
IT
assessments,
clinical
systems
implementation,
system
upgrades,
process
redesign,
training,
HCIS
and
hardware
selections.
Chad
has
extensive
experience
in
the
areas
of
project
management,
advanced
clinical
information
systems,
multi-‐facility
implementations.
347
–
HIE
–
A
Transforming
Strategy,
A
Platform
of
Systems
Presenter:
Mary
Kasal
Organization:
Cornerstone
Advisors
Group
Abstract:
Franciscan
Health
has
one
of
the
largest
regional
HIE’s
in
the
country,
in
continuous
operation
since
2000,
serving
over
900,000
patients
and
over
7000
clinical
users.
The
HIE
is
a
central
Franciscan
strategy
for
connecting
the
physicians
together
and
to
improve
the
care
of
the
community.
This
presentation
will
highlight
the
key
areas
of
HIE
platforms,
how
an
HIE
strategy
can
distinguish
your
organization
and
the
help
you
in
navigating
your
HIE
decisions.
Franciscan
selected
an
HIE
system
in
1999,
taking
a
leadership
position
early
in
the
development
of
what
has
become
a
core
system
for
healthcare
across
the
country.
This
session
will
concentrate
on
helping
you
understand
how
an
HIE
strategy
can
be
a
core
strategy
for
connecting
your
physicians,
improving
continuity
of
care,
reduce
unneeded
testing
and
improve
the
care
of
your
community.
HIE
platforms
contain
multiple
‘modules’
and
hype
regarding
single
areas
(CCD)
has
caused
some
confusion
in
‘what
is
an
HIE’.
This
session
will
lay
out
the
key
areas
of
HIE
in
a
clear
manner
to
help
you
learn
the
facts
behind
the
hype.
This
will
help
you
move
forward
in
planning
an
HIE
strategy
that
is
both
achievable
and
a
solid
fit
for
your
MEDITECH
architecture.
Mary
Kasal
is
with
Cornerstone
Advisor
Group.
Mary
has
been
a
leader
in
the
MEDITECH
community
for
over
25
years,
having
held
CIO
positions
in
large
multi-‐hospital
systems.
Mary
has
been
involved
in
HIE
since
the
early
90’s
when
these
efforts
were
called
CHIN’s.
She
led
the
Franciscan
HIE
to
become
one
of
the
largest
HIE’s
in
the
country,
as
Executive
Director
from
2008
–
2011.
350
–
Accountable
Care
Organizations:
What
are
They
and
How
Do
We
Prepare?
Presenter:
Charlotte
Hovet,
MD
Organization:
Dell
Services
Abstract:
The
Patient
Protection
and
Affordable
Care
Act
(PPACA)
authorized
the
Centers
for
Medicare
and
Medicaid
(CMS)
to
set
up
a
shared-‐savings
program
starting
January
1,
2012.
As
a
provider,
you
may
be
interested
in
Accountable
Care
Organizations
(ACOs)
not
only
for
the
potential
revenue
increase
from
Medicare
but
also
because
of
the
major
changes
in
reimbursement
models
which
lie
ahead.
Join
us
as
we
share
a
few
examples
of
models
currently
being
created
to
build
the
necessary
infrastructure
and
a
roadmap
for
getting
started.
We
will
define
what
an
ACO
means
for
your
organization
and
identify
the
foundation
necessary
to
be
successful
as
defined
by
the
PPACA
and
the
National
Committee
for
Quality
Assurance
(NCQA).
Charlotte
Hovet,
MD,
MMM,
CPE,
Medical
Director,
Clinical
Informatics,
Dell
Services,
is
a
physician
executive
with
extensive
experience
in
medical
management
leadership
and
medical
staff
governance.
In
her
current
role,
Charlotte
partners
with
health
system
clients
to
implement
and
optimize
clinical
information
systems
to
support
excellence
in
patient
care.
With
a
focus
on
physician
engagement,
she
provides
an
experienced
clinician
peer
perspective,
informatics
knowledge
and
skill,
and
physician
alignment
strategies
that
drive
change
in
a
complex
medical
environment.
Charlotte
provides
client
education
on
physician
adoption
of
the
Electronic
Health
Record,
leading
project
teams
in
the
development
of
enterprise
governance,
knowledge
management,
and
change
management
solutions.
Charlotte
has
demonstrated
strengths
in
driving
patient
safety
and
quality
initiatives,
resulting
in
improved,
measurable
healthcare
outcomes.
Throughout
her
many
experiences
in
leading
physicians
through
change,
Charlotte
has
promoted
a
vision
of
patient-‐centered
care,
evidenced-‐based
practice,
and
a
culture
of
organizational
excellence.
Charlotte
has
a
strong
record
of
clinical
credibility,
having
practiced
as
a
board-‐certified
family
physician
for
20
years.
351
–
Finding
Your
Way
Through
the
Jungle
of
Mobile
Solutions
Presenter:
Stephen
Holmes
Organization:
Dell
Services
Abstract:
You
are
ready
to
install
Bedside
Medication
Verification,
EMAR,
Nurse
Documentation,
Transfusion,
or
other
clinical
applications
that
require
bar
codes,
readers,
printers,
etc.?
Are
you
asking
yourself
what
scanner
will
we
use?
How
do
we
print
the
wristband?
What
information
do
we
need
for
the
ID
card?
Should
we
use
a
PDA,
Laptop
or
Tablet?
Finding
your
way
through
the
jungle
of
mobile
solutions
available
today
can
be
very
confusing,
time
consuming,
but
more
importantly
very
costly
to
your
organization
if
you
don’t
make
the
right
choices.
This
session
will
guide
you
through
the
selection
process,
and
provide
you
with
the
information
you
need
to
make
informed
decisions
regarding
mobile
solutions.
In
this
session
we
will
explore:
• How
to
evaluate
and
select
a
printer/wristband
solution
-‐The
evolution
of
barcoding,
and
the
selection
process
for
“scanners”
versus
“imagers”
• The
differences
between
“tethered”
and
“cordless”
scanners
-‐MEDITECH
requirements
for
PDA
devices
-‐Printers
that
are
supported
by
MEDITECH
for
seamless
printing
of
bar
code
labels
• Wireless
needs
for
portable
data
collection
-‐Portable
printing
for
specimen
collection
• Document
Scanners
for
“Point
of
Service”
versus
“Point
of
Use”
• Solutions
providing
patient
ID
cards
to
assist
with
Registration
Stephen
Holmes,
Director,
Business
and
Product
Development,
Dell
Services
has
worked
in
various
capacities
over
the
past
18
years,
in
development
of
MEDITECH
bar
code
and
peripheral
devices.
Initially,
he
worked
with
the
Materials
Management
application
and
for
the
past
six
years
with
MEDITECH’s
Clinical
applications.
354
–
Integrating
Electronic
Medical
Records
to
MEDITECH
Presenter:
Aurel
Kleinerman,
M.D.,
Ph.D.
Organization:
Blue
Iris
(MITEM
Corporation)
Abstract:
The
health
IT
component
of
the
2009
Stimulus
Bill,
the
HITECH
Act,
appropriates
$19.2
billion
dollars
to
encourage
the
adoption
of
Electronic
Health
Records.
Beginning
this
year,
more
than
$40,000
is
offered
to
each
physician
to
acquire
an
Electronic
Medical
Records
System
(EMR).
Beginning
in
2015,
penalties
are
going
to
be
imposed
by
Centers
for
Medicare
and
Medicare
Services
(CMS)
if
the
participating
health
care
provider
is
not
using
an
EMR.
Currently,
it
is
estimated
that
less
than
8%
of
physicians
have
access
to
an
advanced
EMR
–
an
EMR
that
is
connected
to
remote
health
services:
Labs,
Pathology,
Radiology,
Hospital
Information
System,
etc.
There
are
850,000
active
physicians
in
the
US
of
which
85%
(650,000)
practice
in
a
small
office
(less
than
nine
physicians).
There
are
75,000
hospitals
in
the
US
which
means
that
each
hospital
serves
an
average
of
85
small
physician
practices.
Wide
and
rapid
adoption
of
EMRs
is
going
to
strain
the
health
IT
resources
for
integration.
How
to
integrate?
What
is
the
most
efficient
way
to
integrate?
Who
is
going
to
integrate?
What
is
the
role
of
hospitals
IT?
How
will
standards
help
integration?
This
presentation
is
designed
to
be
a
primer
to
integration
and
an
attempt
to
answer
the
questions
above
without
going
into
complex
technical
details.
Topics:
• EMR/EHR
Integration
Challenge
• Integration
101
o Workflow
Integration
(Integration
must
benefit
all
organizations
involved)
o Systems
Integration
Methods
(integrating
computers
and
software)
§ Point
to
Point
Integration
(benefits
and
drawbacks)
§ Interface
engines
(benefits
and
drawbacks)
§ Application
Service
Provider
(ASP)
integration
(benefits
and
drawbacks)
o Barriers
to
Integration
o Integrations
Standards
Aurel
Kleinerman,
M.D.,
Ph.D.
is
the
founder
and
CEO
of
MITEM
Corporation.
He
is
the
inventor
and
architect
of
MITEM’s
application
integration
technology
and
holds
several
US
patents.
Dr.
Kleinerman
has
worked
in
computer
science
and
systems
architecture
for
more
than
40
years,
with
particular
emphasis
on
non-‐invasive
integration
of
various
disparate
systems.
He
has
developed
software
for
a
variety
of
advanced
systems
and
developed
the
first
micro
system
for
control
and
data
collection
in
a
biochemistry
laboratory.
Dr.
Kleinerman
received
a
Ph.D.
in
mathematics
in
1977
from
Cornell
University,
an
M.D.
in
1981
from
Johns
Hopkins
University
and
completed
his
residency
in
medicine
at
Stanford
University
Medical
Center.
He
is
currently
licensed
to
practice
medicine
in
the
State
of
California.
355
–
Managing
Medication
Orders
in
a
CPOE
World
Presenters:
Sue
Byrd
and
Debra
Ramsey
Organization:
Centura
Health
and
CSC
Abstract:
This
presentation
will
cover
the
dictionary
settings
and
configuration
changes
necessary
for
CPOE.
The
presenters
will
discuss
POM
Order
Entry,
pharmacy
verification,
and
eMAR
administration
through
the
unique
challenges
presented
by
a
multi-‐facility
organization,
Pyxis
overrides,
pharmacists
monitoring
of
drug
therapy,
and
Order
Sets.
Sue
Byrd
has
had
over
25
years
of
experience
in
healthcare
at
Centura
Health,
filling
many
rolls
from
Admissions
Manager
and
IT
analyst
for
Pharmacy.
She
was
part
of
the
original
implementation
team
for
MEDITECH
and
is
instrumental
in
the
Medication
Reconciliation
process,
AOM
Drug
dictionary
build/edit,
as
well
as
supporting
the
Pharmacy
application.
Deb
Ramsey,
R.Ph.,
MBA,
is
a
consultant
with
over
five
years
consulting
experience
and
over
20
years
working
in
healthcare.
She
has
experience
as
Pharmacy
and
Information
Technology
Director
at
the
medium
size
hospital,
where
she
was
part
of
the
original
implementation
team
for
MEDITECH
Pharmacy,
eMAR/BMV,
and
NUR.
As
a
consultant
she
worked
with
MEDITECH
Magic,
C/S,
and
Allscripts.
356
–
The
Dirty
Little
Secret
of
Document
Scanning
Presenter:
Bryan
Donovan
Organization:
BizTech
Healthcare
Solutions
Inc
Abstract:
Learn
how
Alice
Peck
Day
Memorial
Hospital
fights
the
battle
of
Time
vs.
Speed
Instead
of
focusing
on
the
“speeds
and
feeds”
of
the
scanner
hardware,
hospitals
are
better
served
by
asking
”how
long
will
it
take
me
to
prep
1,000
pages
for
scanning”.
The
reason
why
is,
if
it
takes
two
hours
to
prep
1,000
pages,
how
important
is
the
fact
that
your
scanner
scans
at
100
pages
per
minute?
Trade
groups
within
the
document
imaging
industry
estimate
that
it
typically
takes
one
hour
to
prep
between
500-‐600
pages
for
the
scanning
process.
What
are
the
factors
that
contribute
to
the
prep
time
labor?
Hospitals
need
to
know
that,
and
they
don’t.
This
presentation
is
essentially
a
case
study
of
the
implementation
of
scanning
at
Alice
Peck
Day
Memorial
Hospital.
It
illustrates
what
was
done
to
fight
the
battle
of
“Time
vs.
Speed”.
Topics:
• Time
involved
with
Scanning
• Speed
of
the
scanner
is
a
miniscule
part
of
the
overall
time
• Scanner
hardware
specs
• Scanner
features
that
affect
prep
• Image
Processing
Issues
• Time
vs.
Speed
• Scanning
Metrics
Bryan
Donovan
is
the
Sales
&
Marketing
Manager
for
BizTech
Healthcare.
He
has
over
15
years
of
experience
in
the
document
imaging
and
workflow
industry.
He
has
been
with
BizTech
for
nine
years
and
previously
worked
for
Digital
Equipment
Corporation
and
Keyfile
Corporation.
He
is
a
Microsoft
Certified
Systems
Engineer
and
a
frequent
speaker
on
the
topic
of
healthcare
process
automation.
Recent
speaking
engagements
include
MEDITECH
User
Conference
(MUSE
International)
May
2009,
Vancouver
BC;
ILHIMA
Annual
Conference,
May
2009,
Lincolnshire,
IL;
and
NEHIMA
Six
States
Annual
Conference,
May
2008,
Worcester
MA.
357
–
Quality
Reporting
and
Meaningful
Use
–
An
Update
from
the
Frontline
Presenter:
Zahid
Butt,
MD
FACG
Organization:
Medisolv
Abstract:
Automated
reporting
of
Clinical
Quality
Measures
(CQM’s)
from
EHR’s
is
an
integral
part
of
Meaningful
use
and
healthcare
reform.
Clinical
documentation
is
an
essential
data
source
for
many
data
elements
required
by
the
e-‐measure
algorithms.
This
presentation
will
focus
on
key
requirements
and
associated
standards
defined
in
the
e-‐Measures
that
drive
this
process.
Major
workflow
changes
that
may
be
necessary
will
also
be
discussed.
Zahid
Butt,
MD
FACG
is
the
founder
and
CEO
of
Medisolv
Inc.,
a
software
company
providing
business
intelligence
and
quality
reporting
solutions
for
hospitals
and
health
systems.
He
manages
a
team
of
software
developers
who
create
innovative
software
applications
from
initial
design
to
full
production.
Zahid
also
manages
and
directs
the
company’s
activities
to
achieve
business
and
growth
objectives,
and
establishes
strategic
priorities
for
the
company
and
defines
tactical
objectives
for
individual
projects.
Their
products
have
been
implemented
in
more
than
150
hospitals.
358
–
Understanding
Data
Repository
Errors
from
a
Former
MEDITECH
DR
Specialist
Presenter:
Shawn
Kenny
Organization:
Blue
Elm
Company
Abstract:
Data
Repository
is
becoming
the
default
reporting
tool
as
more
healthcare
facilities
are
migrating
over
to
6.0.
Demystifying
the
Data
Repository
error
log
will
help
end
users
focus
on
more
important
issues,
such
as
creating
useful
reports
from
the
data
in
the
Data
Repository,
and
less
on
reporting
errors.
This
presentation
will
help
explain
what
the
messages
in
the
Data
Repository
error
log
mean
and
their
importance.
Knowing
why
the
message
was
generate
and
where
in
the
transfer
process
the
breakdown
occurred
will
help
end
users
determine
if
Data
Repository
integrity
has
been
affected.
Shawn
Kenny
worked
in
the
Data
Repository
group
at
MEDITECH
for
several
years
as
an
application
specialist.
His
duties
included
but
were
not
limited
to
implementations,
service
and
updates.
He
was
responsible
for
making
sure
data
was
transferring
correctly
to
many
facilities
Data
Repositories.
For
the
last
few
years,
Shawn
has
worked
at
Blue
Elm
Company
as
Manager
of
Installation
&
Service.
359
–
MEDITECH
6.0
AND
Physician’s
Involvement
Presenter:
Linda
John-‐Breeden
Organization:
Vision
Consulting
Abstract:
This
presentation
will
provide
elements
and
processes
on
how
to
get
physicians
involved
that
will
lead
to
a
successful
implementation.
Getting
physicians
involved
in
the
new
processes
of
MEDITECH
6.0
is
key
in
having
a
successful
implementation,
but
just
saying
those
words
doesn’t
make
it
happen
nor
does
it
actually
get
them
involved.
We
will
discuss
when
and
how
to
get
physicians
involved
with
developing
the
system
from
marketing,
committees,
training
and
support.
Presentation
outline:
Marketing
• Discuss
the
advantages
(Medication
Reconciliation;
Discharge
Routine)
• Get
the
word
out
• Discuss
the
transition
• It’s
not
just
I.T.,
it’s
the
entire
facility
• Make
MEDITECH
6.0
available
at
physicians’
offices
Physician
Participation/Project
Leadership:
• Physician
Champions
• Physician
Advisory
Committee
• Physician
Steering
Committee
• Dictionary
Development
Developing
Training
Plan:
• Use
more
than
one
technique:
Groups,
one-‐on-‐one,
training
DVD
Physician
Support:
• Develop
a
team
of
super
users
just
for
the
physicians
• Make
sure
physicians
know
there
is
support
just
for
them
by
advertising
• Provide
area
to
test
(just
for
physician’s)
with
support
available
• Ask
physicians
if
they
have
questions,
if
they
need
help
• Ask
specific
questions
about
issues
you’ve
heard
of
to
see
if
they
are
having
the
same
problems
Linda
John-‐Breeden
is
a
Senior
Implementation
Consultant/Manager
with
Vision
Consulting.
Linda
has
25+
years
of
experience
in
the
healthcare
arena,
currently
part
of
the
PCM
team
implementing
MT
6.0
and
works
closely
with
Dr.
Charles
Bell
on
the
HCA
MEDITECH
6.0
PCM
team.
Linda
was
a
Training
Leader
for
a
Southern
California
Healthcare
organization,
has
been
involved
in
the
CPOE
process
for
the
last
ten
years
and
has
a
great
understanding
of
the
entire
Revenue
Cycle.
360
–
No-‐Assembly-‐Required
CPOE:
Continued
Discussions
on
Jumpstarting
POM
with
Pre-‐
Built
Medication
Orders
Presenter:
Mili
Gera
Organization:
First
DataBank
Abstract:
Deploying
a
computerized
physician
order
entry
(CPOE)
application
requires
a
substantial
allocation
of
dedicated
pharmacy
and
technical
resources.
This
session
will
present
the
methodology
that
a
Client
Server
site
followed
in
order
to
abbreviate
the
time
demands
placed
on
scarce
pharmacy
resources
in
the
implementation
of
CPOE.
The
hour
will
include
a
detailed
description
of
the
process
used
to
integrate
pre-‐built
ordering
content
from
a
third-‐party
drug
information
provider
into
MEDITECH’s
POM
application.
Considerations
discussed
will
include
the
mapping
of
MEDITECH
data
dictionaries
to
the
ordering
content
provided
by
the
drug
information
compendia,
automated
matching
of
the
pre-‐populated
order
string
content
to
a
site’s
Formulary
items,
and
incorporating
the
pre-‐built
order
strings
into
the
appropriate
fields
in
POM.
In
addition,
there
will
be
a
review
of
other
optimizations
employed
by
the
site.
The
focus
of
this
review
will
be
on
strategies
used
to
minimize
physician
scrolling
by
producing
an
acceptable
number
of
order
strings
per
medication.
Mili
Gera
is
an
Implementation
Engineer
at
First
DataBank.
Throughout
her
time
at
First
DataBank,
she
has
helped
guide
many
users
with
the
process
of
integrating
third-‐party
drug
data
content
into
their
own
Health
Information
Systems.
Having
worked
with
the
multitude
of
market
segments
within
the
health
care
industry,
she's
had
the
opportunity
to
gain
knowledge
about
EMR,
E-‐prescribing,
EMAR
and
CPOE
implementations.
361
–
Eliminating
Common
Registration
Errors
that
Cause
Delayed
AR
Days
&
Denials
Presenter:
Glenn
Gross
Organization:
Provider
Advantage
Abstract:
The
job
of
patient
registration
has
become
one
of
the
most
complex
revenue
cycle
jobs
in
the
hospital.
Low-‐paid
staff
need
to
understand
multiple
insurance
codes
and
rules,
comply
with
regulatory
issues
like
HIPAA,
Fair
Debt
Regulations,
JCAHO
and
more.
Now
they
are
being
asked
to
provide
patient
estimates
and
even
collect
from
the
patient
prior
to
service.
What
can
go
wrong
with
all
that?
This
session
will
review
things
that
you
can
do
to
reduce
and/or
eliminate
common
errors
which
can
cause
"chain
of
event"
issues
throughout
the
patient
access
and
billing
departments
which
cause
increased
AR
days
and
denials
in
most
hospitals.
This
session
will
explore
real
life
patient
access
situations
and
ways
to
deal
with
them
to
make
the
job
of
your
hospital
staff
easier
while
providing
better
communication
and
customer
service
to
patients.
Finally,
we
will
tie
this
to
how
your
patient
access
and
accounting
departments
will
impress
administration
with
lower
denials,
increased
POS
collections
and
happier
customers.
This
will
be
an
interactive
discussion.
Come
prepared
to
share
with
the
group
how
your
healthcare
organization
has
worked
to
put
in
steps
to
overcome
these
challenges.
In
his
role
as
VP
of
Sales
and
Strategic
Business
Development,
Glenn
Gross
has
been
instrumental
in
identifying
and
selecting
key
business
partners
to
develop
an
integrated
revenue
cycle
solution
suite.
Glenn
brings
20+
years
of
software
solutions
experience
to
Provider
Advantage.
His
experience
spans
across
several
industries
including
telecommunications,
financial
and
pension
consulting,
healthcare
and
software
systems
sales.
In
1997,
Glenn
formed
the
nation's
first
sales
organization
to
market
the
idea
of
automated
Healthcare
Access
Management
functions
including
verifying
insurance
eligibility,
patient
demographic
validation,
credit
scoring,
medical
necessity
checking
and
automated
patient
call-‐back
reminders,
to
be
launched
at
the
first
point
of
patient
contact
-‐
scheduling.