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September 2008  
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Home - IT Special - Article

Focus

IT 'Clicks' Healthcare

Indian healthcare is witnessing a metamorphosis, with the onset of newer, better IT applications as well as a broadening focus and increased investment in technology by hospitals. Sonal Shukla and Priti Pathak explore

Technology is gradually but surely penetrating Indian healthcare industry. Along with newer technological trends appearing on the Indian scene, several positive developments in the last couple of years have driven the adoption of IT in healthcare delivery. Today the hospital industry is lapping up better technology and is gradually moving on to leverage the benefits of outsourcing their non-core functions. The US based research firm Datamonitor estimates Indian healthcare IT market to be the fastest growing in Asia, with around 22 per cent annual growth, followed by China and Vietnam. In India, it estimates that IT spent on healthcare will reach $315 million (Rs 1,260 crore) by 2011. Healthcare sector is always criticised as a laggard when compared to other sectors in accepting IT. However the scenario is changing as more and more hospitals are realising the advantages of IT enabling their hospital.

Driving Factors

The current IT spending estimates are below $ 8,000 (Rs 3.2 lakh) per hospital in India, as per Datamonitor. With a maturing private healthcare sector, large private hospital chains have become the primary consumers of HIT (healthcare IT). Not content at that, IT companies have also started pushing boundaries aggressively to bring large government hospitals into their fold. "In the recent past, HIT spent used to be less than one per cent of the operating budget, even for large corporate hospitals. However, this has changed and the scene looks much lucrative for IT players now, with HIT spend touching as much as six to seven per cent of operating budgets," shares Anthony Basumatary, Managing Consultant, Datamonitor, India. This change has been driven in part by the growth of private medical insurance and in part by the surge in medical tourism in India.

Agrees Anurag Dubey, Programme Manager, Healthcare Practice - South Asia and Middle East, Frost & Sullivan, “The fact that IT adoption is currently limited to large, private hospitals in tier-I cities in India leaves a lot of untapped market to focus on for the IT players. However, the penetration rate in India of such IT solutions is still very small compared to the matured markets in the West. Says Kapil Khandelwal, Head, Health and life Sciences Vertical, Asia Pacific and Emerging Markets, Cisco Systems, Inc, "It is higher in the private and corporate hospitals segment at around 80 per cent." However, in the public sector (Government hospitals) segment it is around 25 per cent. We are seeing an increasing interest from both public and private sector. Many Governments are planning on e- health initiatives and have plans to implement health records."

Needs

Worldwide, IT applications in healthcare today are seen in two broad categories. One is care delivery which contains aspects like patient access management and evidence based medicine. The second category is of business infrastructure which includes supply chain management, payroll and benefits administration, finance and accounts, infrastructure and security, regulatory and standards compliance, patient education and e-portals.

In a hospital there are basic four areas that benefit from computerisation. The first is related to patient management activities like admissions, billing and discharge. Computerisation of these allows faster processing of patient related activities leading to better patient satisfaction. It also allows more effective utilisation of hospital staff, leading to reduced manpower costs. The second area relates to inventory management in a hospital. Enterprise wide automation greatly streamlines inventory control and leads to tremendous cost saving and according to industry experts this is probably the most tangible part of returns on investment. The third is related to implementation of EHR. "For medical staff this is the most important part of computerisation since it allows a continuity of medical records across various visits to the hospital by the patient and allows them to provide better medical care," opines Dr BK Rao, Chairman and CEO, Sir Ganga Ram Hospital, New Delhi. Lastly, like any other industry, hospitals also benefit from computerisation of back office functionalities like accounts, human resources and payroll.

Setbacks
Policy: There are no clearly articulated/ communicated government policy on IT adoption in public hospitals. Government funding for HIT is nearly non-existent.

Computer literacy: Limited computer literacy of staff.

Infrastructure:Infrastructure to support HIT adoption is underdeveloped.

Co-ordination: Coordination between public and private sector is yet to emerge.

Legacy systems: Patient health records are paper based in most hospitals (except for large, private hospitals).

Standards: HIT systems developed locally do not follow standards for information representation and exchange. This is complicated further by the multitude of languages used across the country.

Privacy: Confidentiality of patient health information is still being debated and the apex court is yet to come out with an opinion on this.

(Source: Datamonitor)

Hospital Perspective

"The 'connectors' will be the next big thing in healthcare as HIS, EMR, PACS will need to interact in real-time with each other"

- Dr Seema Gupta
Domain Consultant
Wipro HCIT

"The newer trends emerging in healthcare technology today are about collaboration, visualisation and convergence"

- Kapil Khandelwal
Head, Health and life Sciences Vertical
Asia Pacific and Emerging Markets
Cisco Systems, Inc.

"Our choice has been more towards buying all our solutions from the same vendor since we consider inter-operability critical to a successful implementation"

- Dr BK Rao
Chairman and CEO
Sir Ganga Ram Hospital, New Delhi

Technology is now seen as a differentiator by hospitals to set them apart in the competition. Today, all hospital chains have leveraged IT to their advantage in streamlining their operations and providing a better experience to their patients. Hospitals like Sri Sathya Sai Institute of Higher Medical Sciences, Christian Medical College Vellore, Amrita Institute of Medical Sciences, Fortis Healthcare, Kovai Medical Center, Coimbatore; Max Hospitals, Apollo Hospitals, Manipal Hospital, Sankara Nethralaya and Aravind Eye Hospital are said to be the forerunners in adopting IT in India.

Says Dr Rao, "A good business model is always the key driver to any industry. Fortunately a good business model is available for healthcare IT solutions. One of the key drivers will be corporate hospitals who set up a chain of hospitals in different parts of the country. For them to maintain uniformity in their different branches, as well as provide continuity of EHRs across their branches, an enterprise wide computerisation is a must. Smaller solution providers will find enough mid-sized hospitals who will ensure that they remain financially viable."

Apollo Hospitals plans to integrate their information systems across their network of 42 hospitals. It will also introduce HIPAA standards in its systems for EHR implementations. (HIPAA is the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, USA, 1996. This addresses, among others, privacy concerns in healthcare information). The IT team at Apollo has a core group of 30 people. The growing IT budget at Apollo constitutes around 4.5 per cent of its operational expenses.

Pune based (RHC) Ruby Hall Clinic was relying more on paper and verbal inputs to manage business. The prevailing business situation led to leakage in revenue, lack of information flow, and since there was no IT integrated system, time was wasted in doing routine repetitive tasks. The management also needed to lower the costs of completing administrative and clinical transactions. Many times, this directly affected patient care. In 1999, RHC started revamping the IT infrastructure of the hospital and decided to go with best-of-class solutions available in terms of hardware, enterprise application software and networking. HIS, RIS, PACS, EMR, ERP and telemedicine solution'are some of the IT solutions adopted by RHC over a period of eight years. PACS enabled it to improve patient care by streamlining clinical processes and creating a seamless flow of information. Its HIS system consists of a unique medical record number to identify a patient, so while a patient is being admitted, an intimation is sent to the concerned doctor on his mobile informing him about this. Telemedicine technology allows to extend the distance at which patient consultation occur. EMR when integrated allowed greater protection for medical information and improve data sharing without any threat to patient privacy. Today, activities related to patient billing, consulting charges, payments to be made to vendors are all recorded electronically. "The major challenge was the resistance from human resource at operational level", says Anand Patil, Manager-IT, Ruby Hall Clinic. This is a direct outcome for focused implementation of responsibility matrix coupled with the authority decentralisation. The buy-in by senior management is a very critical point in this activity. However at RHC the senior management was not only behind the effort but also led with examples. Today the Hospital is working on the final blueprint for implementing CDSS, clinical pathways and clinical research. "After the implementation of RIS / PACS, the patient volumes have significantly increased. With critical patient information like lab results, radiology images, medications available on-line, there has been a significant reduction of file movements and has helped the doctors to take decisions on time. It enables them to provide single window service for all patient related activities. They are able to get morbidity / mortality information which are just a matter of few clicks,"says Patil.

Another corporate bigwig, Fortis Healthcare is building a mobile-cum-wireless communication framework on IP enabled PBX to connect the nurses, doctors and patients. With this kind of networking system, nurses can use handheld devices to input patient data within the hospital's network, removing the process of taking handwritten notes and then inputting the data by hand. With this implementation, on the other hand patients can also communicate easily with the doctors and nurses faster. The other initiatives taken by the Hospital includes the 'web based interface' and 'database shadowing' for performing data check-in/check-out operations. The 'web-based interface' basically connects the people ie the hospital staff including the doctors and the information/data through web. This system is accessible to the doctors and the other hospital staff and enables easy data sharing faster. The web interface allows access to internet, while the database shadowing reduces recovery time by staging the database restore and roll-forward process, enabling recovery within hours and allows online archival and thus doesn't need any separate solution. Database shadowing is a data backup technique in which an identical copy of the hospital's database is maintained on the computer systems. The primary database and its shadow are linked via cable, telephone line or wireless that any change in the primary database is immediately reflected on the shadow.

However, usage of papers and manual work was such that it became challenging to get the staff accustomed to working on the web-based database. "Perhaps one reason for resistance amongst the front office staff was that after the new system, they would be more accountable. Because, earlier the front office staff used to redirect the patient to the billing clerk for any query, but now they themselves would be answerable to the patient's queries," says JS Puri, VP-IT, Fortis Healthcare, Delhi. Earlier when the doctor ordered to discharge the patient, it took time for the nurses to prepare the documents for the patient discharge and thus the patient had to wait and then further it followed with the billing procedures. A long time was consumed in this entire process since everything was carried out manually. Whereas now when the doctor orders for discharging the patient the entire process is carried out through the web-based hospital system interfaced with the patient's medical records which makes it faster and saves time. Time to admit a patient and indent a drug has reduced by 30 per cent and that too at its initial stage and it will further reduce when data is cleaned further.

Trends and Technology
CDSS

According to experts, while IT has been doing a lot in patient billing, CDSS (Clinical Decision Support System) is the most important tool that any healthcare organisation should have. Agrees Pradeep Saha, Head-IT, Max Healthcare, "The benefits of CDSS are immediate minimisation of medical errors and availability of clinical analytics." According to a landmark study published by Institute of Medicine in 1999, annually, medical errors in healthcare industry results in loss of more than 100,000 lives in North America alone. The WHO also cites that one in seven patients admitted to hospitals in developing countries are affected by medical errors. CDSS are interactive computer programmes which are designed to assist physicians and other health professionals with decision making tasks. "CDSS link health observations like patient data with health knowledge like estabilished clinical protocols to help doctors take right decisions for improved healthcare. However, it is yet to reach the Indian healthcare industry," says Dr S Manivannan, Executive Director, Kavery Medical Centre And Hospital, Trichy, Tamilnadu. CDSS are present to a variable extent in most implementations. "One of the very useful CDSS in our system warns a care provider if a drug to drug interaction exists while prescribing a drug for a patient. Another warns if the patient is allergic to a drug being prescribed. More advanced CDSS exist which help the doctor in reaching a diagnosis. Even though they are not currently implemented in India, they will play a great role in the future in reducing medical diagnostic errors which take a toll on any hospital," opines Dr BK Rao, Chairman, Sir Ganga Ram Hospital, Delhi.

CPOE

Computerised Physician Order Entry (CPOE), a process of electronic entry of doctor's instructions for the treatment of patients under his or her care. These orders are communicated over a computer network to the staff (nurses, pharmacists) or to the departments (pharmacy, laboratory or radiology) responsible for fulfilling the order. CPOE decreases delay in order completion, reduces errors related to handwriting and simplifies inventory and posting of charges. "It reduces the movement of the staff, which helps in effective utilisation of clinical staff. At Kavery Medical Centre and Hospital, we have 120 systems networked. We have started using CPOE in the past year and have found that it has improved efficiency of clinical care delivery. It also limited manual records entry and helped to reduce movement of staff from one department to another," explains Dr Manivannan.

E-learning

3-D training is an alternative to actual training which is done in a virtual environment, with no possibility of causing harm to a patient during the training period. With the advent of laparoscopic and robotic surgery, this offers a great potential of training future surgeons. Advanced virtual training is also available today for simpler procedures like vascular access.

Indian Association of Medical Informatics, an association that provides IT solutions has been utilising the concept of e-Learning to its fullest to train and educate medical students as well as professionals. "We use a host of e learning solutions as well as simulation techniques which are important for medical graduates, post- graduate students as well as practitioners as newer techniques are coming up in all fields and we cannot experiment on the patient. Conferences and meetings are now possible online with eLearning," states SB Gogia, President, IAMI.

e-Learning is also used for the capability development purposes in the hospital set-up. "Training systems are vital to excellence. Fortis has a hugely successful capability development initiative called Fortis Institute of Enhanced Leadership Development (FIELD) that drives e-Learning in multiple formats. "We are developing 3D animated and multimedia enabled learning tracks for the same," says JS Puri, Vice President-IT, Fortis Helathcare.

Digitising Health

Apart from PHR which is typically a health record that is initiated and maintained by an individual, the other upcoming technological trend is said to be Personal Health Application (PHA ), a next generation health information which includes PHR and wellness data too. "PHA is a collection of applications that are personalised for a person's use. PHA is said to be a consumer-centric information system that can incorporate sick-care data currently found in EHRs and PHRs.

They can give a view of a person's physiological and psychological risk factors, current health, health trends and projected health status. They can further reveal the interventions that are effective for an individual by integrating and analysing a lifetime of data about health statues and quality of life, Conventional and Complementary and Alternative medicine (CAM) treatment received and the clinical outcomes of that care. "Whereas today's PHRs present narrow views of a person's general health information, PHAs would provide clear, comprehensive views of the environment- showing risk factors, current health status, health trends, and projected future health status. Revealing such trends and predicting one's health condition under different scenarios can be powerful motivators for health living, as well as offering important clinical insights for healthcare providers," opines Dr Rahul Shetty, Founder-President, Mezocore Technologies, Canada. According to experts only PACS and EMR are currently available in India, although not widely adopted, and PHA tools are still in infancy world-wide and it will be while before it is available in India. Further, with presence of tools like digital stethoscopes, monitors and ECG machines, problems can be diagnosed by experts who are not physically present.

Preferring End-to-End

As newer healthcare delivery models rely on integration of services between multiple service providers (outsourced, in-house fulltime and part time, contract etc), their competitive edge, in terms of quality and cost, will be determined by a good IT end-to-end solution provider. In a significant 'IT in Healthcare' study done in the west, the single most important finding is that healthcare providers that invest and utilise IT only in the billing or clerical areas inadequately utilise the investment in IT hardware and software. However, hospitals that fully utilise HIS for both clinical and operational functioning, with complementary networks and devices, reap the benefits of improved care and costs. Today, more and more hospitals prefer end-to-end IT solutions. However, both options have advantages as well as disadvantages. "India is a volumes market and has to be played like one. Models that work in the west would in most cases fail here," opines Ajay Chanam, AGM-WW Communications, Sobha Renaissance Information Technology.

Purchasing different solutions from the same vendor allows better integration between the various components, something that is critical in today's complex environments. On the other hand, purchasing different solutions from different vendors allows one to have the 'best of breed.' Gangaram Hospital chose to stick to one vendor to accentuate inter-operability. "Our choice has been more towards buying all our solutions from the same vendor since we consider inter-operability critical to a successful implementation," avers Dr Rao.

Benefits Galore

To improve quality of care, reduce costs and plus increase access to healthcare is driving IT adoption in the healthcare industry. Healthcare technology, if implemented properly, prevents medication errors. A physician ordering a medication electronically will know immediately if the medication he/ she is prescribing counter reacts with a prescription that the patient is already on or if the wrong dosage was mistakenly prescribed. According to experts, the greatest benefit of IT lies in chronic disease management, where costs are typically high. Delta checks built-in at key decision clinical transactions reduce errors in diagnosis, medication and critical test reporting. Secondly, the instantaneous availability of clinical data like imaging, lab reports, and second opinion shortens the time taken for diagnosis and initiation of treatment. There has been some research that has shown that healthcare IT does improve clinical outcomes. However, there has also been some research that has found IT decreasing clinical outcomes. "Part of this decrease may be due to end-users needing time to learn the new system. Additionally, much of the clinical benefits are not realised immediately. Rather, they will be realised in five to ten years (or even later for preventive health measures). Given that, decreased re-hospitalisation rates and decreased medication errors are often cited as an indicator of IT improving clinical outcomes," states Christine Chang, Associate Analyst, Datamonitor. Care pathways and treatment plans are already being incorporated in the healthcare IT at hospitals in the western world and have yielded rich returns. Says Dr Gupta, "Sentara in the US, with 90 ICU beds distributed over four hospitals, leveraged IT to reduce their ICU ALOS (Average Length Of Stay) by 17 per cent and patient mortality by 20 per cent as far back as in 2000." Improved clinical outcomes also bought the cost for each ICU patient down by $ 2,150 per patient giving them a Return on Investment (ROI) of 155 per cent. The benefit of this is enormous with an immediate benefit of minimisation of medical errors and availability of clinical analytics.

Although the official healthcare expenditure for healthcare in India is around five per cent of GDP, in rural families it can go up to 15 per cent because of such hidden costs like travel and time of work. "Everyone knows that there are peripheral costs involved in healthcare like travel and stay. They sometimes can amount up to 40-60 per cent of a person's entire healthcare costs. Technologies like tele-medicine can totally negate this cost for all non-invasive treatments (which amount for the majority)," shares Ajay Chanam, AGM WW Communications, Sobha Renaissance Information Technology (SRIT) and GM - Head Private Sector and SME, iHCX. Telemedicine can dramatically decrease the travel costs which although a hidden cost of healthcare (and not measured) is a very significant help.

Connected Healthcare

The concept of connected healthcare is said to have captured the imagination of healthcare industry today and includes network infrastructure, information access and remote service delivery for seamless provision of healthcare. Dr Seema Gupta, Domain Consultant, Wipro HCIT feels that the 'connectors' will be the next big thing in healthcare as HIS, EMR, PACS will need to interact in real-time with each other and with patient monitoring gadgets at the hospitals, consulting rooms, homes and workplace. The connectors would be V SAT, internet, mobile and anything which connects the available information to all the service providers ranging from insurance companies, doctors, home care providers as well as vendors. Dr Gupta cites Israel's example where the hospitals have used normal landline connections to transmit health related data. "For example, when you monitor heart patterns, they are monitored in real time and transmitted over the normal phone wire. To a substantial limit even the hospitals in Australia have utilised the concept of connectors," states Dr Gupta. Khandelwal believes that the newer trends emerging in healthcare technology today are about collaboration, visualisation and convergence. "Healthcare technologies need to unite patients, caregivers, administration and families across the care continuum through the innovative use of data, voice and video so people can communicate wherever they are, using any device whether wired or wireless," states Khandelwal.

Even though the mobile phone is omnipresent today, it is still not used for health as patient and doctor still desire a human interaction. However, mobile use in reminders and emergency and clinical alerts is growing. "At Fortis, our doctors use clinical software on mobiles. I envisage a 'mobile health' SIM card that will also store health information securely. With 3G and enterprise level bandwidths on mobile, I expect video consults on mobile with doctors," says Puri.

Mobile computing is going to play a major role feels Murthy Rayaprolu, Head- Delivery, VBU-Healthcare Provider, Satyam Computer Services Limited. "We do not have a bedside computer today. That is also because desktop at every bedside is not economically viable. It can interfere with some of the medical systems which could be there in emergency rooms. However, there are devices coming up in the market which looks like a tablet and can be carried anywhere in the hospital and has limited interference with the electronic equipment. The doctors carrying this device can locate the patients wherever he is in the hospital. These kind of devices are coming into the market but it is not fully implemented anywhere," shares Rayaprolu.

Furthermore, traditional data, voice and video technologies in a hospital are quickly getting redundant and expensive to sustain. Newer technologies based on IP- platforms are leading towards a digital transformation and are cheaper to maintain. Healthcare is witnessing a convergence of data, voice and video over wire/ wireless IP-based networks in a hospital and according to experts these technologies are scalable (build as you grow) and easier to operate and maintain in a hospital. Experts predict that wireless technology is going to be a turning point - through which doctors, nurses and patients can communicate seamlessly on Wireless Local Area Network (WLAN) and eventually WiMax. "At Fortis, we are building a mobile-cum-wireless communication framework on IP enabled PBX that will really connect these users. If patients can find and talk to the care provider fast, half the battle is won," opines Puri. Trichy based Kaveri Medical Centre and Hospital has implemented a SMS software which is used in applications like, informing consultants about patient admission, informing referral physician about their patient details, informing patients about latest news in hospitals, informing patients when their lab reports are ready, intimating patient about health check-up dates as well as informing HOD about new job orders and pending orders. "Overall it is a good CRM module. When railways and airlines can use SMS CRM why not healthcare? We have scanned all the old medical records, which clinicians can access from their desktop. This is used to review old case sheets when the patient come for review and used for clinical research," states Dr S Manivannan, Executive Director, Kavery Medical Centre and Hospital, Trichy. Also, the reality in healthcare technology is that there are no standardised applications across healthcare industry. In order to improve patient care through rapid access to information means that applications need to follow industry guidelines and workflows. "Technologies that can increase access to information, anytime, anywhere and reduce the Total Cost of Ownership (TCO), lead us in the direction towards visualisation of different layers of technology architecture," adds Khandelwal.

Sir Ganga Ram Hospital, New Delhi
Delhi based Sir Ganga Ram Hospital has invested funds for the implementation of a PACS system which will allow images from radiology, CT, MRI to be available on all computers within the organisation. The Hospital is planning a RFID tagging system for its fixed asset management system. Later this year the Hospital would also introduce PACS for enterprise-wide imaging. This 'enterprise-wide PACS' enables imaging specialists to do their primary interpretation work within their own departments and to store the images and reports in a central, multidisciplinary archive where the information can be accessed by partner institutions, as well as by primary care physicians, using a custom-designed web browser and desktop computers running windows. Every system is integrated with HIS leading to easy availability of data that helps the hospital management make better and informed decisions.

Challenges

One of the major challenges faced were the change in workflows in various departments of the Hospital because of enterprise-wide computerisation. People took time to adapt to these. Previously, computerisation did not involve medical and paramedical staff functions but now it did. Many of them found it difficult to adapt to the new environment. "Our laboratories had gone paperless and this was a double edged sword. Doctors were used to seeing reports on the move, going through paper records while examining a patient. Now, it necessitated them to view the reports on a computer," explains Dr B K Rao, Chairman. Medical care workers are mobile while computers are not and this clashes. Therefore, the Hospital is planning to implement laptops to overcome this problem. Another problem is related to training of the users to operate in a fully computerised environment. Healthcare workers often find it difficult to spare time from their daily activities to undergo training. Today, training has become a continuous process in the Hospital with new staff joining regularly.

Key Concerns

Healthcare sector is always said to be less open as compared to other sectors when it comes to adopting newer IT trends. Indian hospitals have indeed been late in realising the advantages of IT. Lack of awareness, resistance to change, the low priority given to financing IT-related investments, lack of suitable solutions, as well as the absence of professional decision making has led to low penetration of HIS in this high-potential market. Hence, there are not many hospitals in India which have successfully automated all their core functions like administrative areas, clinical areas and back office. "Most hospitals that have already embraced technology, have automated their operations in parts and therefore most of them are not deriving the full benefits of information technology," states Khandelwal. Hence, there are not too many examples (reference sites) that other hospitals in India can follow. Moreover, the full benefits of IT will be apparent only when the core clinical operations are automated, which is still a few years away in India. Some of the other problems that are unique to India are lack of enough trained professional medical/ healthcare informatics personnel in the industry. "All the innovations available in the west are available in India, and very often at competitive costs. However, currently, the limiting factor is lack of the domain knowledge and overview to utilise these innovations to deliver the most effective and efficient solution," opines Dr Gupta. Also, the lack of integrated information across the enterprise (lack of data sharing across departments and applications and lack of collaboration across various stakeholders in healthcare are few main intimidating issues present in the Indian healthcare today. "The other big challenge has been to design an EMR system that can have unlimited sub-modules as per the specialties and super specialties ranging from general medicine to paediatrics, to cardiology, to neurology and urology," believes Dinesh Samudra, CEO- SEED Healthcare Solutions Private Limited.

Vendor Watch
Just as hospitals vary in their size, so will their demand for the size and scalability of the IT solutions. The requirements of large hospital are met mostly by international vendors or reputed Indian vendors, whereas small hospitals are likely to adopt smaller solutions, which are readily available in the Indian market. The Indian market for such products has not yet matured. Applications available in the market range from HIS, including EHR and back office functionalities to PACS. Adjunct solutions are available for attendance systems and RF tagging. Some IT healthcare companies had ventured into the Indian market as tie-ups with local solution providers. This enabled them have to have a readymade support base with minimal investment. For example, TrakHealth from Australia (now InterSystems, USA) has tied up with MTech of Delhi to implement and support its solutions. However, more and more international vendors are entering the Indian market directly with their own brands, for example, Siemens, GE, and iSoft. Industry giants like Cerner, Vista are also close to entering the Indian market. According to experts, for the IT vendors, large part of the opportunity lies in the replacement of outdated first-generation HIS with newer, more powerful HIS applications at large hospitals with complex and sophisticated operations. "There are an estimated 25,000 hospitals in India, excluding the private clinics and nursing homes. This factor should be enough to drive the HIS market in India," opines Dinesh Samudra, CEO - SEED Healthcare Solutions Private Limited. Currently, the HIS market in India is still in the early growth stage. It is a small market dominated by in-house implementations and customised solutions developed by small local software developers. In terms of technology adoption, the Indian market is far behind its Asia Pacific counterparts such as Australia, Japan, South Korea, Singapore and Malaysia.

Also, the newer technologies require very high initial investment and the ROI takes many years. All these factors make adoption of newer technologies difficult for any hospital. Hence a cautious and patient approach is said to be required before any viable results could be obtained.

Apart from this, cost incurred on maintenance of systems can be a major factor for hospitals when deciding to invest in technology. And this is especially true with systems that are built on obsolete technology. As technologies change rapidly over few years, hospitals need to adapt to the changing environment. Proprietary technologies will make certain IT solutions adoption in healthcare industry expensive. "As healthcare is already expensive, implementation of an expensive IT infrastructure in any hospital will be a major deterrent," agrees Dr Rahul Shetty, Founder-President, Mezocore Technologies, Canada. However, according to Dr Gupta, hospitals are traditionally very familiar with maintenance costs as they buy expensive machinery and often run a large maintenance department, therefore IT maintenance costs are both -understandable and acceptable- to them.

"Unfortunately, initial implementation is more than just installing the hardware and software. The costs of change management (ie. implementing the change from manual to digital) are never included or negotiated in any contract which allows vendors the convenience of calling that maintenance. So, most projects fail (the failure rate is officially 60-70 per cent though unofficially it goes up to 95 per cent at least as partial failures) and that is a deterrent," avers SB Gogia, Indian Association of Medical Informatics (IAMI).

Another reason is lack of common standards in healthcare which makes it even more difficult for hospitals to adopt newer technology. "HIPPA is widely used in North America, yet in India there are no common standards. Many hospitals adopt a very conservative and cautious approach to adoption of IT in healthcare," opines Dr Shetty. Further, fear of loss of privacy and confidentiality of health data hamper the IT penetration.

Max Healthcare
Max Healthcare's hospitals are spread across eight locations within the boundaries of Delhi. So the main purpose for opting IT solution was to get all these hospitals at various locations connected to each other with a centralised system making it convenient for both the hospital and the patients. They felt a need of having such a system which could make the health analytic to understand the disease trend and decide the medicine, required treatment to be provided to the patient, thus reducing the occurrences of medication error.

IT implementations

The 'lease line connectivity' is a service through which all the hospitals can remain connected to the data server. This service is implemented since 2006. Leased lines are dedicated data circuits between two locations via a private line used to transmit data at a constant speed. This is integrated with the HIS, so whatever information relevant to the hospital or the patient that is entered in the HIS gets recorded in the server through lease line. 'Bharti' is the lease line connectivity service provider for Max. The speed of the connectivity was upgraded from 512 kbps to 4 mbps since the last two years. 'PACS' is incorporated from the past six months and the cost investment for this was round about Rs 60 lakh. Laboratory Information System (LIS) is another solution adopted by Max to keep a track of all the laboratory records. The LIS software integrated with HIS stores the entire lab information. Two months ago the HIS got updated with a 'blood bank module' and 'diet module.' The updated HIS with the blood bank and diet module acts like a guide and helps in patient care. Earlier the blood bank and diet module used to run manually but now there is a 'system parameter control team' to make an entry on the blood bank module which is known as a master entry. Likewise the diet module enables to make the diet record for each patient.

Future

In this quality driven healthcare industry, it is no news that the healthcare IT market will continue to grow, particularly in countries like India. Hospitals moving towards quality certification and accreditation leading to standard operating procedures are driving the demand for standard based applications. "We are moving towards an integrated healthcare scenario - where various healthcare entities will get connected on a common platform to allow information exchange between standard based applications and thus improving efficiency of systems," feels Dubey.

"Implementing IT at the inception stage is much easier rather than trying to install it in the older ones. Thus, as new healthcare organisations are built in India, they should be built with the use of healthcare IT the mind right from the beginning," says Chang. Today more and more hospitals are realising the advantages to implementing IT solutions. India has a large number of hospitals and in terms of sheer numbers of implementations possible, the potential is huge. The Indian vendors are also improving on the quality of solutions they provide and it is hoped that they will soon be able to meet the challenge provided by the international players since India has highly skilled IT manpower resources. In the private sector, hospitals are looking at IT mainly from a commercial application perspective. Experts feel that these hospitals should now go beyond the ADT and billing processes to apply IT in clinical applications like CDSS, EMR and clinical research. There is surely a lot to be done in terms of applying IT from the patient care perspective.

As Dr Gupta concludes, "The complexity and variability of healthcare delivery- both in terms of business models and clinical demands a deep insider 'worm-view' and an informed IT 'bird-view' from its IT solution. Only an intelligent solution that provides this integration can succeed in healthcare. The good news is we are getting there, may be slower than the other sectors but still getting there."

sonal.shukla@expressindia.com
priti.pathak@expressindia.com

 


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