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PALO ALTO, Calif., Feb. 7, 2005 – HP today introduced two solutions that help
healthcare organizations efficiently and cost-effectively access and manage patient
information in order to improve quality of care.
The HP Medical Archiving Solution and the HP Forms Automation System 1.2 will be
showcased at HP booth 4436 at the Healthcare Information Management Systems
Society Annual Conference, held Feb. 14-17 in Dallas.
Designed for radiology practices within diagnostic imaging centers, clinics and
hospitals, the HP Medical Archiving Solution provides affordable long-term storage of
patient studies regardless of size. Physicians can then securely and simultaneously
access this vital information in order to collaborate across departments and medical
facilities.
The HP Forms Automation System 1.2 is digital pen and paper technology, providing
users the simplicity of a traditional pen and paper with the functionality and speed of
the Internet.
“As part of HP’s health strategy, we’re delivering solutions that enable collaboration
and access to information among health ecosystem partners, drive process efficiency to
maximize resource effectiveness, manage both regulatory change and clinical
innovation and, most importantly, improve the quality of patient care,” said Jeffrey D.
Miller, vice president, worldwide health and education industries, HP. “The HP Medical
Archiving Solution and the Forms Automation System accomplish those goals at a
fraction of the cost and more efficiently than comparable systems.”
Filling the need for efficient data management
The HP Medical Archiving Solution fills a critical gap for healthcare organizations
dealing with the challenges of growing volumes of image data. Regardless of the
source – CT Scan, MRI, mammogram, digital x-rays or picture archiving and
communications systems (PACS) – the solution provides the flexibility to manage data
distributed across tiers of storage and the confidence that comes with continuous,
proactive data checking for unsurpassed data integrity. Medical professionals can then
rapidly access the patient studies, using familiar terms such as image type or patient
information, via streaming technology.
Scaleable without downtime to greater than 2 petabytes – the equivalent of more than
2,000 terabytes of stored data – the solution also allows for a full view of a patient’s medical history, making it easier to treat patients quickly, affordably and in a more
reliable way.
“Cancer strikes people from all walks of life and from every region in British Columbia.
BC Cancer aims to offer the best treatment in the most supportive environment,” said
Don Henkelman, chief information officer, Provincial Health Services Authority. “More
than 30 hospitals throughout BC can store radiology studies in the province-wide
medical image storage system. The ability to share medical information province-wide
allows patients to stay close to home during the course of treatment while getting the
benefit of the expertise of physicians from across the province. HP and Bycast
technologies have helped transform healthcare and improve patient wellness in BC.”
The solution stores data on a high-availability system based on industry-standard HP
ProLiant servers, HP StorageWorks Modular Smart Arrays and x86 processors and
powered by Bycast’s StorageGRID™ software. Users are able to set policies to control
the storage devices and media used to coincide with organizational needs.
The HP Medical Archiving Solution relies on open standards for interoperability and is
offered with technology refreshes and services for 24x7 support. The solution interfaces
with existing single and multi-PACS applications, while also supporting the archiving
requirements of pre-PACS environments.
Allowing rapid access to integrated information
The HP Medical Archiving Solution gives physicians the ability to create a single
repository for secure PACS applications. Single hospitals, imaging clinics or large
hospital systems can share their infrastructure to house image types used in different
PACS applications.
Users can integrate text-based information from health information systems, such as
patient records and insurance data, into their solution and migrate images from other
vendor PACS to one centralized, consolidated, long-term storage solution. Whenever
health professionals access the provider’s network, they can securely view the images,
even from the Internet.
Mercy Miami hospital, an HP and Bycast customer, is already benefiting from the
technology that is part of the solution. “Mercy Miami has improved the quality of patient
care by speeding access to diagnostic images. Archived images that previously took
three to five minutes to view now take less than a second,” said Jorge Labrada,
radiology information systems administrator, Mercy Miami. “The process efficiency
achieved through the deployment of HP and Bycast StorageGRID solutions has transformed our patient care delivery by enabling a comparative view of a patient’s
imaging history.”
The HP Medical Archiving Solution also helps hospitals and other healthcare
organizations comply with regulatory requirements guiding the storage, transmission
and protection of patient data. It uses a security model that is compliant with the U.S.
Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA), which regulates the
handling of patient information and has mandated its data security requirement by April
2005.
HP Medical Archiving Solution – Medical imaging’s future
The HP Medical Archiving Solution is expected to be commercially available later this
month in North America and Europe. Deployment racks are factory-built configurations
that support starter configurations of 5, 10 and 20 terabytes of compressed and
protected data. The solution, consisting of hardware, software and services, can be
implemented to align with the physical facilities within a healthcare organization and is
expected to be sold for two to four cents per megabyte.(1)
“We’ve evaluated the HP Medical Archiving Solution with a critical eye and found it to
meet the industry’s needs – easy, unlimited storage for patient imaging studies with
reliable, fast, anytime/anywhere access,” said John Quinn, chief technology officer,
Capgemini.
Forms Automation System 1.2 – Linking physical and digital patient worlds
The HP Forms Automation System (FAS) 1.2 eliminates the need for cumbersome
processes such as forms scanning and manual data re-keying.
HP FAS allows healthcare professionals to print forms on demand and collect patient
data using standard paper and an HP Digital Pen (used just like a ballpoint pen), which
automatically transmits medical records to a central electronic medical record (EMR)
system. The HP FAS reduces transaction costs up to three or four times the average cost
of $1.25 per form while improving the quality of patient care by reducing
administrative tasks of healthcare professionals.
After a successful trial of the technology, the University Hospital of Basel, one of the
largest hospitals in Switzerland, is partnering with HP to deploy digital pen and paper
technology in all hospital departments in order to speed up access to data, improve
data accuracy and reduce digital data processing costs by 30 percent.
“This is a typical example of a solution that cuts costs and enhances patient
convenience which can be developed when a university hospital like Basel combines its
expertise with one of the world’s leading technology companies,” said Franz Buffon,
director of IT, Hospital Forms Solution, The University Hospital of Basel, Switzerland.
Updates to the FAS 1.2 include:
- A more efficient way for healthcare professionals to transform handwriting to digital
data with the new HP Handwriting Recognition Engine;
- Better connectivity to EMR systems with customized XML output schemes, decreasing
upfront development cost and time investment;
- Faster form design and deployment, allowing field attributes import and automated
forms printing;
The HP Forms Automation System 1.2 is expected to be available later this month.
About HP
HP is a technology solutions provider to consumers, businesses and institutions globally.
The company’s offerings span IT infrastructure, global services, business and home
computing, and imaging and printing. For the four fiscal quarters ended Oct. 31,
2004, HP revenue totaled $79.9 billion. More information about HP (NYSE, Nasdaq: HPQ) is available at www.hp.com.
(1) Actual prices may vary.
This news release contains forward-looking statements that involve risks and uncertainties, as well as assumptions that, if they ever
materialize or prove incorrect,could cause the results of HP and its consolidated subsidiaries to differ materially from those expressed or
implied by such forward-looking statements and assumptions.All statements other than statements of historical fact are statements that
could be deemed forward-looking statements, including the expected development, performance or rankings of products or services;
statements of expectation or belief; and any statement of assumptions underlying any of the foregoing. Risks, uncertainties and
assumptions include the development, performance and market acceptance of products and services and other risks that are described
from time to time in HP’s Securities and Exchange Commission reports, including but not limited to HP’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for
the fiscal year ended Oct. 31, 2004. HP assumes no obligation and does not intend to update these forward-looking statements.
Editorial contacts:
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mark.stouse@hp.com
Denise Herich,
Hill & Knowlton for HP
+1 858 695 7056
dherich@hillandknowlton.com
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