Published:
Iron Mountain Acts to Improve Health of Hospital Medical Records
BOSTON, Oct. 13 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Iron Mountain Incorporated
(NYSE: IRM), the global leader in information protection and storage services,
believes it has the cure for what ails hospitals struggling to transition to
an electronic health record (EHR). The company today announced it will begin
offering a diagnostic assessment that shows the nation's largest hospitals how
to process patient records more efficiently, speeding care and shortening
revenue cycles. The diagnostic tool is part of Iron Mountain's shift toward a
more consultative approach in the healthcare space and is the latest in a
string of recent moves by the company to support healthcare providers' drive
to lower costs while improving patient care.
Generally taking 3-4 weeks to complete, the assessment helps healthcare
organizations to automate workflows and fund the transition to electronic
health records by identifying inefficiencies in their current medical records
management practices. The assessment is designed for large teaching hospitals
and multi-hospital healthcare networks, where numerous file rooms and records
storage vendors create the need for greater efficiency.
"Most hospitals are struggling to transition from paper records to more
efficient electronic health records," said Ed Santangelo, Iron Mountain's
senior vice president of healthcare. "While many see the value in moving to
the electronic version, they're just not sure how to make the switch with
existing resources and without disrupting care. Our assessment lets hospitals
take an evolutionary approach to enact what potentially can be self-funding
changes without affecting their daily mission to provide quality patient care.
They can save money on records storage, ease into an EHR and re-engineer
existing processes."
Long heralded as a way for healthcare providers to improve patient care
and efficiency, electronic health records have proven too costly and complex
for most hospitals to adopt entirely. According to a survey conducted by the
American Hospital Association in 2006, only 11 percent of the nation's
hospitals had fully implemented electronic health records. Another 57 percent
of hospitals reported having a partially implemented EHR. President Bush has
set a goal for all Americans to have an electronic medical record by 2014.
Iron Mountain's assessment looks at the costs of staff, third-party
vendors, storage and even lost revenue from file rooms occupying space that
hospitals could use for treating patients. Additionally, the company reviews
the hospital's methods for processing patient records. In a paper-based
hospital, the medical records staff must assemble charts, code them and
perform other actions sequentially. Hospitals cannot complete these activities
concurrently like they can with electronic medical records. While this process
for handling patient records can take up to six months for every discharge,
Iron Mountain has been able to cut this time for some customers to just 30
days by helping them store paper records more efficiently and enabling them to
digitize patient charts on an as-needed basis.
Adopted from RMS Services, a healthcare records specialist acquired by
Iron Mountain, the assessment isn't the only new addition in the company's
suite of healthcare offerings. Recognizing that the healthcare market is
laboring to transition from paper-based to electronic records, Iron Mountain
has made a series of recent investments to better address this need. Earlier
this year, Iron Mountain introduced two digital archives-one that provides
long-term archiving and off-site disaster recovery for digital medical images
and another that stores and protects electronic copies of medical records and
other documents. And planned for early next year, Iron Mountain will expand
its release of information service, having just entered into a software
licensing agreement with Cobius Healthcare Solutions, LLC.
About Iron Mountain
Iron Mountain Incorporated (NYSE: IRM) helps organizations around the
world reduce the costs and risks associated with information protection and
storage. The company offers comprehensive records management and data
protection solutions, along with the expertise and experience to address
complex information challenges such as rising storage costs, litigation,
regulatory compliance and disaster recovery. Founded in 1951, Iron Mountain is
a trusted partner to more than 120,000 corporate clients throughoutNorth
America,Europe, Latin American andAsia Pacific. For more information, visit
the company's Web site at www.ironmountain.com.
Contact: Dan O'Neill, Iron Mountain
dan.oneill@ironmountain.com
(617) 535-2966
Kristen Georgian, Weber Shandwick
kristen.georgian@webershandwick.com
(617) 520-7042
SOURCE Iron Mountain Incorporated
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Copyright © 2008, NewsBlaze,
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