Biomedical and IT departments are learning to work together to offer better customer
service. Career- advancement opportunities are following.
Not so long ago, in the days before monitors, pumps, and just about
every other piece of medical equipment known to mankind went high-tech, biomeds gave nary
a thought to things like local-area networks. Same with data archiving, project
management, and the entire panoply of issues routinely handled by information sciences
(IS) professionals. Conversely, IS specialists didnt spend much time contemplating
catheter tubes, flow rates, and calibration.
Now they do. Because now they must.
There is a convergence of medical, communications, and information technologies,
and the pace of this confluence has been rapidly increasing, says Stephen L. Grimes,
FACCE, senior analyst and consultant for GENTECH in Saratoga Springs, NY. Medical
devices and systems are being designed and operated as special-purpose computers, with
more features being automated and more health data being collected, analyzed, and stored
in them.
This may present multiple advantages, but it creates a dilemma. Consider todays
smart infusion pumps. As aptly noted by Greg Walton, CPHIMS, FHIMSS, senior vice president
and CIO of Carilion Health System in Roanoke, Va, these machines typically have on
board several chips, a couple of levels of applications and lots of software; they operate
over a wireless network and are used by clinicians for all kinds of workflow and safety
issues. Question: At what point do these machines stop being a medical device and start
being a computer? I dont know the answer, but I know they need integrated
support.
This inability to decide where one form of technology ends and another begins has led
many hospitals to hybridize the various departments historically responsible for
maintaining eacha smart move, says Eric Rosow, MS, founder and chairman of Premise
Development Corp in Hartford, Conn, and former head of biomedical engineering at Hartford
Hospital.
Synergy is produced by the convergence of an organizations biomed and
information technology (IT) teams, he says. What biomed brings to the
relationship is a very good understanding of the workflow in environments that may be
unfamiliar to IT or that IT may be uncomfortable going intofor example, the OR and
the ICU. Because clinical and biomedical engineers live within and understand these
clinically intensive areas, they are well-suited to play an important role in reducing
errors, increasing patient safety, and optimizing workflow. What IT brings to the table is
extensive experience in managing complex, multiphase, multiyear, multimillion-dollar
projects, such as enterprise-wide clinical documentation.
In short, IT/biomed convergence can yield better service to the clinicians who rely on
todays medical devices. Better, safer, more efficient patient care naturally
follows.
A goal of convergence is to eliminate the complexities faced by our
customers, Walton says. We dont want our customers having to try to
figure out whether the problem in their equipment is a hardware issue, a software issue,
or a network issue. The only thing we want them doing is calling the help desk and telling
us theyve got a problem; well take it from there. And because of our
convergence of service groups, we can now approach problems much more holistically.
Matter of Destiny
Experts like Al Gresch, corporate manager of clinical engineering at Aurora
Healthcare in Milwaukee, believe it is not a matter of if or when IT/biomed convergence
will occur, but how.
Now that everything in health care is data-driven, convergence of IT and biomed
is pretty much a foregone conclusion, he says.
Gresch isnt sure how many hospitals have completed the journey to integration, or
even how many are just beginning. However, if he were to hazard a guess, he says that the
vast majority are at least on the road, with most of those already far along on it.
The first hospitals to explore IT/biomed convergence did so more than 10 years
ago as more and more programmable medical equipment with the capacity to collect, store,
and transmit data came into use, Gresch says. The need for convergence
intensified as technology moved forward and it became necessary to accumulate and analyze
data.
Integration received a big boost in the run-up to the anticipated failure of older
computer chips brought on by the arrival of the year 2000Y2K. In my health
system, Gresch says, the initiative for addressing the Y2K challenge was IT
driven and managed, but there was strong collaboration with clinical engineering to
implement.
To date, two main models of IT/biomed convergence have taken hold. The first is
assimilation, wherein one department acquires the other or merges with it. Thats the
model in play at Waltons company, where convergence began in earnest in 2002,
starting with a hierarchical change in which the clinical engineering group was brought
under the direct control of IT.
We stopped calling ourselves information services and became the Technology
Services Group to more accurately reflect where we were headed, Walton says. I
wanted to create an organization that would hire and groom people to be technology
professionals, regardless of whether their basic training was in computer science or
clinical engineeringor, for that matter, nursing and other allied health fields. I
believe that a team is strengthened if the skills of the individuals are optimized.
Thats what convergence allows you to accomplish.
The assimilation model adopted by Hartford Hospital places the biomed department as a
division of IT but aims to preserve key elements of their individual identities.
The information services department is broken into a division of biomedical
engineering, a division of network services, and a division of clinical
applications, Rosow says. We did it this way because biomedical engineering is
a unique animal and should remain that way.
Rosow says that he began making moves toward convergence less than 3 years after taking
over as director of biomedical engineering at Hartford Hospital in 1995.
We were one of the first hospitals in the country to do this, he says.
We saw convergence on the horizon and wanted to be proactive in addressing it.
Hartford Hospital took its initial, tentative steps toward IT/biomed convergence when
Rosow called a meeting, during which the chief information officer and the vice president
of support services heard his proposal for a modest integration of the two departments.
After agreement to converge was reached, they set a date to make it happen.
Nowhere to Hide
The second main model of convergence is partnership, an approach taken by Aurora
Healthcare. Gresch says the partnership model made more sense to his organization in light
of the marked differences in skill sets possessed by IT personnel and biomedical engineers
and techs.
The clinical engineers strength is his intimate knowledge of the front-end
device and the devices clinical impact, he says. The IT
professionals strength, on the other hand, is his deep familiarity with network
technology and usage management. As such, its much harder to blend those divergent
skill sets than it is to pair them.
Organizationally, to create a bridge between IT and biomed, its necessary for
management to first identify the deployed systems and applications that touch upon
both clinical engineering and IT, Gresch says. You then establish the
responsibilities of each department, but in a way thats transparent to the end-user
so he or she doesnt have to try to figure out which department to call when help is
needed. In effect, there should be a designated first-responderthat person would
then take ownership of the problem and decide which other resources to bring
inbecause the customers expectation is that the person he or she calls for
help is the one whos going to resolve the problem, or at least make sure resolution
takes place, and will be held accountable if resolution doesnt occur.
No matter which model of convergence is adopted, Gresch says biomeds come out ahead.
This is about producing synergy through the breaking down of barriers, he
says. For biomeds, these broken barriers mean better opportunities for career
advancement.
Walton agrees. The professional who is comfortable in both the biomed and IT
worlds is the one who will advance furthest and/or fastest, he says. A biomed
school graduate now has the ability to rise to a hospital senior executive levela
health-system vice president of technology, for example. Before, in many systems, that
same recent biomed graduate might not reach the C level within their organization.
Advancement in a converged environment isnt a slam-dunk, however, he warns.
In order to reach the top levels, Walton says, biomeds are going to
have to learn how to think and act strategically. They have to work hard on understanding
the big picture.
Gresch expresses confidence that convergence efforts in the future could go smoother
thanks to biomed schools making introductory IT a part of their curriculum.
The new biomeds being produced are graduating with a helpful basic level of
understanding about how medical devices connect into a network and how they store and
process collected data, he says.
In Greschs judgment, the challenge convergence presents to biomeds is that to
survive and thrive, theyre going to have to do everything they can to enhance
their skill sets and knowledge, but also do everything they can to visibly position
themselves as a provider of great value to the organization.
Acceptance of the changes wrought by convergence is difficult for some because
theres invariably a political dimension to it.
You have those who want to battle to protect their turfthats just
part of reality, Rosow says. The bottom line is, effective pursuit and
achievement of organizational goals will require CE and IT collaboration. I believe that
this collaboration will become more extensive and strategic in the years to come.
In Grimes opinion, refusal to accept convergence is not an option.
Theyll have to do this if they want to avoid going the way of the dodo,
he says.
Gresch hits just the right note by reciting lines from a motivational poster on the
wall in his office: A bend in the road is not the end of the roadunless
we fail to make the turn. Convergence for the biomed profession is that bend in the
road. Are we going to make the turn? The answer is yes. Well make the turn, and the
entire profession will be able to continue its journey forward. 24x7
Convergence: An IT
Perspective
Biomed leaders tend to greet convergence opportunities with enthusiasm. The same
is true among many of their counterparts in IT.Today,
to properly support caregivers and patients, it takes an integrated service organization,
which can only come about from convergence, says Greg Walton, CPHIMS, FHIMSS, senior
vice president and CIO of Carilion Health System in Roanoke, Va.
Waltonco-chairman of the American College of Clinical
Engineerings Integrating the Healthcare Enterprise Task Forces strategic
planning committee and a past chairman of the Healthcare Information and Management
Systems Society board of directorspersonally spearheaded convergence at his
11-hospital enterprise. He got the ball rolling by inviting representatives from clinical
engineering to meet for a discussion among peers about the future, and about the
mutual challenges we could expect to face, he recalls.
That meeting went smoothly, the biomed department having
earlier reached many of the same conclusions as Walton. What did he learn from the
encounter (and from those that followed)? That you must have honest dialogue,
he says. Only then do you have a solid footing for finding the common ground on
which to better meet the needs of the caregivers and the patients. Basically, everybody
needs to respect one anothers positions; if they do, everybody wins. RS |
HIPAAs
Role in Convergence
Thanks to the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996
(HIPAA), security looms large as an issue hospitals must consider when developing and
implementing biomed/IT convergence plans. To learn more about the security issues
surrounding convergence, 24x7 spoke with Stephen L. Grimes, FACCE, senior analyst and
consultant for GENTECH in Saratoga Springs, NY; chairman of the HIMSS Medical Device
Security Workgroup; chairman of the American College of Clinical Engineering (ACCE) HIPAA
Task Force; and member of the ACCEs Integrating the Healthcare Enterprise Task
Force. In what ways is medical device
security a concern with regard to convergence?
Grimes: It is largely as a consequence of
technological advances and the convergence of technologies that medical devices are
increasingly vulnerable from a security standpoint. As we adopt and come to rely on these
more sophisticated technologies, we also are introducing more potential failure
points. Each failure point is like the end of a string that, if pulled,
could unravel the securityin effect, compromise data integrity, availability, and/or
confidentialityin the systems we have come to rely on.
How are those issues resolved?
Grimes: Effectively addressing security requires
that clinical engineers adopt a new paradigm. Rather than focusing on the management of
discrete devices, clinical engineering must work in concert with information technology
professionals to develop a security process that looks toward ensuring the integrity,
availability, and confidentiality of critical information.
Is addressing security a one-time proposition or an
ongoing process?
Grimes: Ongoing. One cannot achieve a secure
technical environment and then sit back and relax. Technologies are continually evolving,
just as are the security threats. Health care providers must put a security process in
place and continually monitor its effectiveness.
And thats one of the benefits of
convergencean ability to more effectively address these issues?
Grimes: Correct.
RS |
Rich Smith is a contributing writer for 24x7.