Wednesday, June 24, 2009

EMR have to many buttons, what a mess

http://mobihealthnews.com/2917/kibbe-successful-emrs-will-be-like-the-iphone-platform/comment-page-1/#comment-5771

Answer to this request for "iPhone like" EMR

What is being asked for, is a well designed system. Many EMR systems available today have been hacked together, not designed with Engineering principles. I hear these complains from both HIT and from Domain/caregivers experts. What is needed when creating any system is tried and true engineering process. Start with the domain experts, doctors, nurses, lab tech, etc. add an group of software system architects and develop the requirements. Then design a system based on requirement and build system. The domain experts and system architects also develop a test and acceptance plan that is used to determine if the system works per design. It takes both sides of the equation to build a good system, domain expertise and engineering.

This is the first generation of real EMRs. Like most new technologies the domain expert has a great idea and learns how to program a prototype (a few buttons) which evolves into a product. The products are introduced to the market, many more functions and more buttons are added until you have a mess. Second generation, the idea's are taken to the next level, this usually comes after an influx of money. Some companies start over using standard engineering practices. Other companies keep the original system and keep hacking away. Look how long it took Microsoft to get rid of DOS. Almost all software companies face these problems from time to time. Ebay started as a small program that was written in a guy's garage to sell his wife figurines.

The good new is that Enterprise system in HIT are relatively new and the market will wash out the bad EMR or they will redesign to meet the needs of their customers. The problem is that these systems are very expensive and it will cost us all to flesh them out. Make sure that when selecting such an important system that you have done your due diligence.

Jeff Brandt
CTO motionPHR mobile Personal Health Record for the iPhone
MyMobileMedBox for Android

Saturday, June 20, 2009

Remote medicine

This is a reposted comment to telemedicine article in India where oncologist are providing medical to remote India.

This is the future of medicine, 10 years from now your doctor may be located thousands of miles from you. I have been discussing remote medicine with a surgeon friend of mine for several year, last year while providing services to the PGA tour he got a opportunity to visit a northern universities virtual surgery center. He was very excited with he told me of the realistic feel of selecting a tool from a screen and cutting into a cadaver. I envision the future of surgery to be similar to a self checkout line in the grocery store. You have 4 patients on operating tables with one surgeon and a anesthesiologist, the surgeons performing surgery are not on location. Today some eye surgery are done remotely with the surgeon in the next room with robotic gloves. The outcomes are proven to be better for this type of precision surgery.

It is fun to dream, see the future make the future.

Jeff Brandt - motionPHR for the iPhone

Monday, June 15, 2009

Not convinced about EMR?

When you have such a disruptive technology as EHR/EMR hit a vertical market such as Healthcare you are bound to have push back, and rightfully so. The early adopters are easy, then comes the convincing and the proof. I have a saying that I have been using for many years, "What is the best word processor on the market? The one you know.". Remember the last time you had to replace a favorite tool, whatever it was. The new one is not as comfortable, it is a piece of S... then you get to know it, use it more, it's not so bad, even better than an old friend. Jimmy Conners had the same problem in the 70's when he would not give up his old Wilson racket. Finally he did and he played better. He thought he needed that old racket to play well. It wasn't the racket, it is the person using it that really counts. Things change and EMR/EHR are here to stay, so embrace them, be a champion. You may as well.

Jeff Brandt
motionPHR for the iPhone
mymedbox for Android

Secuity and EMR, Will Cloud Help?

It will depend on management and their IT department. I was consulting for a hospital in Central Oregon that had 40 application running an 40 Microsoft machines to host. This is not an Enterprise system. The change to Enterprise Cloud will take time and training of desk top IT staff.
Cloud computing has been around for a very long time it is proven to work. It is basically client server or a WebApp. The security will always remain in the hands for the decision makers to know how to make the correct choices and implement the control policies. For laptops and desktops that do not have hard drives Cloud will provide much security. But again the implementation must be correct.

On the subject of EMR security, Cloud security can be very safe but you must do your homework on the hosting facility and their policies. Most EMR's are on a server in a closet in doctors offices or in the developer of the EMR offices. One of the biggest risk is server snatching, when at ID thief breaks into the Doctors office and just takes the servers.

Jeff Brandt MotionPHR Personal Health Record for the iPhone
myMedBox PHRlite for Android

June 15,

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

repost: which Smartphone will lead

Our company Communication Software Inc. develops Medical apps for the iPhone and Android. We were deeply involved in development of the first Internet Boom in the 90's were I saw the same situation as the apps today. The first websites as are the apps of today were whatever anyone thought were cool with very little business planing to back them. Also, if you remember the 90's online businesses were offering non sustainable business models, example pricing models that lost money which is the same in today's app market. Most apps are free and with many of these; free is not cheap enough. This will change as the market matures and these poor business models companies and developers disappear.

As for which phone will lead the market in the future, it is hard to tell. Like so many new ideas, the leader fail behind as followers learn from the leader mistakes.

I believe Android is the wild card. It is open source and the development is in Java, the OS is free and manufactures are getting behind the platform because of cost. There are 18 new Android phones to be released this year. One thing you can count on it is going to be a good fun ride so hang on.

Jeff Brandt
motionPHR a Personal Health Record for the iPhone
myMedBox a Personal Health Record for Android/Google Phone