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Medical Readiness IT Systems. MAJ Gunnar Kiersey ARNG Medical Readiness Officer. 12 MAR 2012. Outline. Medical Readiness Categories MEDPROS Commander’s Profile Report G1 Portal (DPRO) Medical Readiness Adjusted Report Basic Dashboard Trend Analysis & Comparison
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Medical Readiness IT Systems MAJ Gunnar Kiersey ARNG Medical Readiness Officer 12 MAR 2012
Outline • Medical Readiness Categories • MEDPROS Commander’s Profile Report • G1 Portal (DPRO) • Medical Readiness Adjusted Report • Basic Dashboard Trend Analysis & Comparison • MED-CHART Medical Readiness Reporting (MRR) • Way Ahead • Conclusion
Medical Readiness Categories Source: Medical Readiness Leader Guide https://medpros.mods.army.mil/MEDPROSNew/secure/Default.aspx
https://medchart.ngb.army.mil/MED-CHART/ T-10 AGR Medical Team
ARNG Medical Readiness Reporting • The Medical Readiness Reporting (MRR) module was developed under the direction and leadership of the ARNG Surgeon’s office. • The ARNG Medical Readiness Officer, MAJ Gunnar Kiersey presented a very specific vision and detailed requirements for the development of the MRR module. • The MRR module is replacing (sun setting) the existing RC Reports module. • Release 2.0 DEC 2011 • The MRR module exists as part of the MED-CHART suite for existing RC applications.
Challenges • Provide consolidated medical and dental readiness reports by location, by taskforce and by UIC. States would like the ability to build their own State Regional Report in MRR using UIC’s. • Provide medical and dental readiness statistics to include each State’s ranking amongst the nation by percentage. • Present Medical Readiness Classification (MRC) and Dental Readiness Classification (DRC) 1, 2, 3A, 3B, and 4 by percent / total number. • Persist the data as it is produced daily and trend it against budget, manpower and readiness data. • MEDPROS provides source data.
Medical Readiness MRO Dashboard Medical Readiness Flu Map
Way Ahead • Continue to develop medical information technology to maximize efficiency. • Project readiness into the future based on the expiration date of individual soldier medical readiness indicators. • 30 Days • 60 Days • 90 Days • 120 Days, etc • Personalized Dashboards • Users will be able to customize their own dash boards to reflect information important to their workflows • Incorporate MEDPROS Task Force data • Trend readiness data against budget, resources and manpower • Correlate existing readiness data from RC modules
Conclusion • CHALLENGES: IM/IT Solution • Current IT systems are cumbersome, redundant, and lack interoperability in multiple arena • GOALS: Foster innovation, excellence, and research. Identify and implement best practices From 5 DEC 11 LTG Patricia D. Horoho’sCommand Guidance – Commanding General, US Army Medical Command and The Army Surgeon General