Friday, November 4, 2016

CHIME Acknowledges Phoenix Children’s Higginson for innovation

A Lean measure or step powered by numerous IT-supported attempts achieved efficiencies at Phoenix Children’s Higginson, leading to savings, as well as betterment in operations and sufferer satisfaction.


The outcomes of these attempts at the pediatric facility were among the reasons that its CIO, David Higginson, achieved the 2016 Innovator of the Year award at the Fall CIO Forum of the College of Healthcare Information Management Executives.


Higginson achieved the award on the day of Wednesday at the CHIME occasion, in Scottsdale, Ariz. CHIME acknowledged the Phoenix Children’s Higginson for innovation.


For instance, rather than spending millions of dollars on a sufferer education and entertainment system, Phoenix Children’s Higginson put customizable iPads in sufferer rooms, enabling patients and their parents to access a host of facilities and services, involving clinical results, discharge instructions, educational resources over their treatment and more. One-time charges for the initiative were covered by support and grant from the James M. Cox Foundation, permitting the hospital to move resources to other areas.


“When you’re confronted with the choice of making a new emergency department to replace one that is seeing 3 times the number of sufferers it was constructed for, or spending $100 million on a piece of software, the answer appears to be obvious – search a way to do the system for a reasonable amount and leave the capital for the direct requirements of the patients and families we serve,” Higginson stated.


Various other annual awards were honored at the conference:


University of Colorado Hospital teamed up with analytics firm LeanTaaS to establish a solution that has provided patients larger access to life-saving dialysis treatments with far less wait times. This inventive partnership gained UCHealth and LeanTaaS CHIME’s 2016 Collaboration Award.


Pamela Arora, senior vice president and CIO at Children’s Health in Dallas; and Bryan Bliven, CIO at the University of Missouri Health Care were honored with the 2016 Transformational Leadership Awards for their remarkable work on cybersecurity. The award is sponsored by CHIME and the American Hospital Association.


Randy McCleese was awarded with CHIME’s 2016 Outstanding Service Award for his devotion to the profession and his endless affords to transform healthcare, in recognition of his work in policy and regulation attempts for healthcare IT.


Linda Hodges, ex-senior vice president and IT practice leader at Witt/Kieffer, was honored by the CHIME Foundation with the 2016 CHIME Foundation Industry Leader Award.


Philips was awarded with the inaugural CHIME Foundation Partner Award. Sara


 

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