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Knowledge Driven Health: Health Information Networks. <presenter name> <presenter email> <presenter group/country>. Health Information Networks—Vital for the World. The Critical Need to Access Patient Data Enterprise Challenges Important First Steps Around the Globe
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Knowledge Driven Health: Health Information Networks <presenter name> <presenter email> <presenter group/country>
Health Information Networks—Vital for the World • The Critical Need to Access Patient Data • Enterprise Challenges • Important First Steps Around the Globe • Key Microsoft Advances • Connected Health Framework—Architecture and Design Blueprint • The Benefits of Microsoft Health Information Networks Solutions • Dynamic IT Optimization Models • Microsoft Connected Health Platform • Important Next Steps
Every day, healthcare providers and must gather, interpret, and document massive amounts of patient data Sharing accurate patient data is critical to ensure expert care, reduce clinical errors, and minimize healthcare costs A Matter of Life and Death:The Critical Need to Access Patient Data • Medical errors cause tens of thousands of deaths annually worldwide • Government agencies need to be accountable for ensuring public safety • Ongoing legislation and government programs are facilitating change
Enterprise Challenges • Many portals and applications are incompatible • Difficulty integrating information within an organization, as well as to outside organizations • Patchwork of applications segregated in silos • Difficulty rewiring workflows based on changing requirements and goals • Intractability of current integration technologies (such as HL7 v2)
Health Information Networks Defined • Any health-related information exchange between systems • Within the same organization • Enterprise Application Integration (EAI) • Across multiple organizations • Clinical Data Exchange (CDX) • Health Information Exchange (HIE) • Regional Health Information Organization (RHIO) • Ambitious HIN projects worldwide • Driven by the need for increased patient safety, lower health costs and government mandates
Important First Steps Around the Globe U.S. • Nationwide Health Information Network (NHIN) • Enjoys bipartisan political support • For more information see: www.hhs.gov/healthit/rfisummaryreport.pdf Canada • Infoway • Invests with public sector partners across Canada to implement and reuse compatible health information systems that support a safer, more efficient healthcare system Singapore • Electronic Medical Record Exchange (EMRX) • Allows all public hospitals and polyclinics to share patient records online The Netherlands • AORTA program • Creates an infrastructure that links patients, professionals and healthcare insurers U.K. • The National Care Records Service (NCRS) seeks to link more than 45 million patient records over the next 5 years And many other countries
Key Microsoft Advances • Developing architectural guidance • A reliable distributed system for health information exchangebased on open standards The Microsoft Connected Health Framework–Architecture and Design Blueprint • Developing a partner ecosystem • ISV partners make customer experience repeatable, cost-predictable, and interoperable • SI partners for business consulting, deployment, integration • Engaging early adopters • ADD SAMPLE LOCAL CUSTOMERS HERE • Developing and profiling the use of standards • Working closely with SDO to define infrastructure standards • Working with customers and partners to refine use of standards • Developing a solid infrastructure for Health Information Networks • Prescriptive guidance for the Microsoft platform andreference implementations The Microsoft Connected Health Platform • Knowledge Driven Health leadership worldwide
Connected Health Framework:Architecture and Design Blueprint An overarching framework for health industry architecture • Service-oriented health information integration and collaboration • Enterprise-, state-, province- and country-wide projects • Faster ROI • Based on open standards and protocols • Developing pathways to better, more interoperable solutions • Faster ROI for customers • Easier integration across multiple healthcare treatment areas
Connected Health Framework Architecture Platform Services and Capabilities Collaboration, Presentation and Point of Access, Identity Management, Privacy and Security, Data, Shared Services, System Management, Communication User and Business Processes Connected Health Services Hub Business Components
Ready Partners for Health Information Networks • (Create a different partner list for each local area.)
The Benefits of Microsoft Health Information Networks Solutions Microsoft and its partners enable you to: • Improve patient care • Reduce costs • Access patient data—anywhere • Devote more time to patients • Enhance productivity • Simplify information management
The Microsoft Approach Patient Safety Relevant Information at the point of care ConnectedInteroperable by design ProductiveFamiliar tools to automate the way you work Time Let Doctors be Doctors Cost 33% of US Health Expenditure does not benefit patients Best EconomicsDriving down the cost of healthcare technology DependableProven and Robust Value Measurement
The Microsoft Platform forHealth Information Networks Leverage .NET Framework as the infrastructure for Health Information Networks • Service Oriented Architecture • Web Services and XML Use BizTalk Server as the key integration technology • Accelerators for HL7 and HIPAA for standards support • Native support for XML standards and Web Services Use SQL Server for the clinical repository Information integration enables new opportunities • Clinical portals • KPI and business intelligence
Dynamic IT Optimization Models Core Infrastructure Application Platform Business Productivity Identity & Access Search User Experience Security Business Intelligence Business Intelligence Unified Comms Networking SOA & BPM Data Management Collaboration Management Dynamic Infrastructure Dynamic Applications Dynamic Business Development Virtualization Ent. Content Mgmt.
Integrated Platform Core Infrastructure Application Platform Business Productivity Dynamic Infrastructure Dynamic Applications Dynamic Business
Software And Services “Finished” Services • Dynamics CRM Live • Live Meeting Service • Hosted Exchange, SharePoint, Office Communication Server “Attached” Services • Exchange Hosted Services (Forefront, filtering) • Windows Update • Windows OneCare “Building Block” Services • Virtual Earth • BizTalk Services (relay, authentication) • Live ID and online services • .NET Framework • IIS • Silverlight • Active Directory • Stateless • Virtualization Service Enablers
The Microsoft Connected Health Platform Based on the solid foundation of theMicrosoft platform • Includes specific prescriptive guidance • The Connected Health Framework Architecture and Design Blueprint • Includes reference implementations and building blocks • The Health Connection Engine • The Microsoft Health Common User Interface • A healthy partner ecosystem
Critical Points to Ponder • Healthcare providers and government agencies need immediate access to accurate patient data • Microsoft and its partners offer dynamic, easier solutions for Health Information Networks • The bottom line: Microsoft is committed to help healthcare professionals provide the very best in patient care, more easily and more efficiently
Important Next Steps The Connected Health Framework – Architecture and Design Blueprinthttp://www.microsoft.com/industry/healthcare/businessvalue/chframework.mspx • Get more details at http://msdn.microsoft.com/health • Contact your local Microsoft subsidiary or visit health@microsoft.com • Provide feedback and discuss on http://SolShare.net • Learn more by reading this comprehensive whitepaper: http://www.microsoft.com/industry/healthcare/businessvalue/chframework.mspx • Strategize service-oriented business and technical architectures • Leverage Microsoft’s platform for security, collaboration, management and integration
Microsoft Health Q&A