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June 05, 2007 03:15 PM Eastern Daylight Time
Massive Hospital Technology Reconfiguration Sets
Stage for Agreement
NEW YORK - (BUSINESS WIRE) - Hoboken University
Medical Center (HUMC) has retained Network
Infrastructure Technology (NIT Connect) to run its
information technology system in an outsourcing
agreement that grew out of the hospital’s recent
acquisition by the City of Hoboken, N.J.
Under the two-year agreement, NIT Connect will
provide planning, infrastructure management,
hardware and software upgrades, staffing, training
and IT support for all hospital departments.
While it is common for hospitals to outsource
some services, such as housekeeping, billing
and even some medical departments, outsourcing
of IT services is a less common - but
growing - phenomenon.
The long-term outsourcing agreement is a
continuation of the work that New York-based NIT
Connect began last year when it was retained to
help with the massive data migration necessitated
when the City of Hoboken began the process
of acquiring St. Mary’s, now known as Hoboken University Medical Center. The data migration
entailed extensive medical and administrative
records, as well as other technology reconfigurations
- all of which needed to be accomplished
without disruption to the daily operations of the
328-bed hospital.
“We had a seamless data migration,” said Ronald
DiVito, Chief Financial Officer of HUMC. “There
was not a bump during the process. Under our
multi-year deal with NIT Connect, they will work
with us beyond the migration stage, finding and
implementing IT solutions that fit the hospital’s
growing needs.”
Lior Blik, NIT’s President and CEO, has served as
the hospital’s Acting Chief Information Officer
since the migration project began. “This outsourcing
arrangement benefits the hospital in many ways,”
says Blik. “By outsourcing, the hospital gets the
benefit of a variety of knowledge bases. As a
consulting firm, we support numerous networks
and can optimize respective IT systems to specific
businesses. In addition, we can bring in technicians and project managers as needed, then shrink the staff again when a project is done, eliminating significant human resources issues for the hospital.”
Blik believes in focusing on the client’s bottom line in his work. “One of the values we bring to all of our clients is cost savings,” he says. “We do not take vendors’ recommendations for granted; we question them and seek alternatives. Being an independent provider of IT management,” Blik says, “gives us the ability to use our experience to negotiate the best contracts and optimal solutions on behalf of the client.”
For a hospital that lost $25 million last year before its transition to public ownership, such savings are critical. Says Blik, “NIT Connect is very pleased to contribute to the financial turnaround of HUMC by assuming a significant role in its IT affairs.” HUMC’s DiVito says the hospital is profitable today, which he attributes in part to NIT Connect’s work. “Key to the success of the city’s takeover of St. Mary’s/HUMC was the significant cost savings HUMC realized in its IT Department,” said DiVito. “NIT Connect was helpful in negotiating contracts and saving us money with software providers, including minimally $80,000 per month on application hosting alone. Their knowledge of specific healthcare information applications, such as radiology film inventory system, probably saved us an additional $2 million.”
Blik described the extensive data migration and related IT efforts. “We migrated all users within this healthcare system into a new network connecting the five major buildings of the hospital to a 6-mb Internet line, installed new firewalls and spam filters, developed a much faster backbone, increasing the LAN from 10mb to 1 gig, and established new IT policies to ensure proper operations, maintenance and compliance. To-date we have migrated about one terabyte of data, and we lost nothing.”
The migration affected 1,100 staff members and involved mostly administration and financial departments. The hospital’s medical data will be migrated in the next phase of the technology transfiguration, which is ongoing.
The most important benefit to the hospital of outsourcing its IT operation, Blik believes, is the objectivity he and the NIT Connect technicians bring to their work. “We’re an IT company,” he says. “that brings the ability to mobilize the necessary resources to implement projects in a cost-effective, time efficient manner and with little or no disruption to patient care, as we have demonstrated in HUMC. Our experience and ability to act on behalf of the hospital enables us to negotiate better contracts with third-party information systems vendors, which may generate considerable savings to the institution. The saved funds not only help the overall financial strength of the hospital, but also free resources to new services sought by the clinical departments.”
“When assuming the responsibility for the IT affairs of a major healthcare provider such as a hospital,” adds Blik, “it’s important to recognize the financial goals and abilities of the organization and assess specifically where significant cost savings can be realized, so funds may be available to support new services.”
NIT Connect (http://www.nithealth.com) is a premier provider of computer networking management services, specializing in serving the healthcare providers, including hospitals, clinics, specialty service provides and physician practices. Services provided by NIT Connect include IT management, network installation and support, network infrastructure management, application support, CRM management connect http://www.nitconnect.com).
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