expert corner
expert corner
“In the coming decade, ICT will play an important role in hospital management”
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Dr Nagendra Swamy SC President Manipal Hospitals
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> www.ehealthonline.org > April 2011
hat is your perspective on the growing implementation of IT in Indian hospitals? Indian healthcare is a US $60 billion industry, which is expected to reach US $150 billion by 2017. Beds in excess of 1 million need to be added to reach a ratio of 1.98 per thousand population (world average is 3.3) at an investment of US $88 billion; 74 percent of which will come from the private sector. WHO recommends India to add 80,000 hospital beds a year for the next 5 years to meet the demands of healthcare sector. With this boom in healthcare industry, in the coming decade, IT will play an important role in the management of Indian hospitals. Process management, patient care and management information systems are key areas where IT will add immense value for cost optimisation and effective management. Unlike other industries like manufacturing, banking, insurance, pharma, aviation and insurance, where IT has became a business enabler and is helping these sectors to improve overall efficiency, enhance customer satisfaction, process standardisations, cutting
costs, increase revenue, and bring in more transparency, the healthcare sector, which has so far been bit conservative from the perspective of IT usage, has started realising that IT can really add value to the business. As a part of this understanding, the major hospitals in India have started investing in IT and are engaging with reputed service providers in the healthcare IT domain. The key components of hospital digitisation include a clear strategy and roadmap, mandate from management, strong IT and functional leadership team identified to drive the implementation and adoption, reliable and cost effective partner for applications and infrastructure. Electronic Medical Records (EMRs) are making their way into hospitals. Do you believe that Indian hospitals are ready to adopt EMRs in a big way and go paperless? Indian corporate hospitals have already made substantial progress in implementation of EMR in their hospitals. Though complete paperless environment is challenging but 80 percent of this aim is achievable in immediate future. With user friendly initiatives and cost reduction it is possible to achieve this in private sector. Training and change management is the key challenge.
EMR has some 18-20 data components, which need to be captured in the system. These include details like patient history, chief complaints, diagnosis, clinical notes, lab diagnostics/results, medication, medication charts, pharmacy, operations, discharge summary, and so on. From the technical standpoint, this is not a big challenge and the system can be fine tuned to capture all these details. However, from the adoption perspective, Indian hospitals will need to manage the ‘culture change’ more effectively especially from the ‘clinical adoption’ perspective. For EMR to become successful, doctors will need to make use of the system and capture essential clinical information. I feel that hospitals integrating 100 percent EMR, considering they start this journey in a planned way, will take around 3-4 years for becoming paperless. Please tell us about the health IT solutions installed at Manipal. How can an IT solution transform the functioning of a healthcare provider like you? We have recently implemented HIS solution at our flagship hospital in Bangalore and the same HIS is implemented at our hospital at Jayanagar, Bangalore. This implementation covers core HIS
With a hospital information system already in place, Manipal Hospitals is planning an expansion spree by connecting all its hospitals through an HIS. Dr Nagendra Swamy oversees, among other responsibilities, the functioning and operations of the Bangalore Cluster of Manipal Hospitals. In conversation with Divya Chawla, Dr Swamy throws light on the IT initiatives of Manipal Hospitals and its future plans in this space
April 2011 < www.ehealthonline.org <
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