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Interoperability and Mobility: Revolutionizing Healthcare Delivery

Mobile health app

There are certain items that necessitate multiple components to benefit consumers. You can own the most polished and decked out convertible, but without an engine in it, you’re not going to be taking it many places to show it off.

Similarly, smartphones offer capabilities to help you check the weather, communicate with friends and family, pay bills, check sports scores, and so much more. However, if you’re without a charger for your phone, it’s most likely not going to do you any good.

Healthcare technology is another type of product that often works better when it’s utilized with other components. For example, an electronic health record doesn’t aid a physician when she can’t access it during her patient’s visit. It’s also not very helpful when her patient has to fill out the same medical information each time she sees a new provider.

Interoperability 101

Many healthcare providers find themselves facing challenges due to the lack of interoperability between technologies designed to streamline workflows and improve patient care. Having the right resources in place gives these technologies the capability to promote interoperability across the healthcare community.

With the “ability of different information systems, devices and applications (systems) to access, exchange, integrate and cooperatively use data in a coordinated manner,” healthcare organizations are boundaryless in terms of region and portability. They can access, use, and share information as well as optimize the health of their patients and their communities around the globe.

Let’s look at 4 levels of interoperability:

Why interoperability matters to providers and patients

Interoperability could save the United States healthcare system more than $30 billion a year. Although fewer about 4 in 10 health systems are successfully sharing their data with other systems, those that do achieve a bevy of benefits, including:

Approximately 75% of healthcare organizations have at least reached the most basic level of interoperability and are more easily able to exchange data with other providers’ systems. According to one report, 80% of providers report that electronic data exchanges increase their efficiency while almost 90% disclose that this sharing of information improved their patient’s quality of care. Also, when doctors have access to a patient’s records, they can avoid ordering duplicate tests or procedures.

For patients, the seamless exchange of data through healthcare interoperability meets their expectation for convenience by giving them easy access to their full medical history, including medication lists, laboratory test results, hospital admissions, and other records. It enables them to be more active in their own care and achieve continuity of care across all their providers.

What mobility means for providers

Another way technology has revolutionized the delivery of healthcare and continues to do so is through the mobility of information. Through tools such as smartphones, mobile apps, electronic tablets, laptops, mobile health messaging platforms and others, providers can more easily and accurately communicate with patients, collect bedside data, conduct telemedicine visits, monitor data from remote devices and coordinate care continuity.

Most healthcare providers even prefer to use mobile technology for patient care and believe it directly benefits quality of care. For example:

It’s estimated that by 2022, 97% of all healthcare workers will depend on mobile devices for remote patient monitoring and patient health tracking to improve upon workplace efficiency and enhance patient care. This includes physicians, nurses and other clinicians.

Through mobile access to electronic patient records and corresponding data, nurses benefit from enterprise mobility by being able to spend more time at patients’ bedsides and less time updating records. They can better communicate with not only team members but also patients’ family members. On-demand data and applications can be delivered to any device over any secure network, allowing for access anytime and anywhere.

Some providers have employed mobile technology for population health purposes. Others use it to monitor and treat patients with chronic disease. The mobility of information enables providers to deliver prescription information to pharmacies, automate some administrative tasks, and transmit patient data to other providers, thereby promoting healthcare interoperability.

Not all mobile technology is employed for patient care. Some hospitals and health systems use it in the form of a smartphone app designed to track the location of clinicians, equipment and supplies. This often results in increased productivity and reduced operational costs.

We’re here to empower 

The team here at Harmony Healthcare can enhance your organization’s success with expert consultants in reimbursement, population health, and information technology. These experts can guide you as you strategize and manage your interoperability revolution. 

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