UAMS Medical Center Only Arkansas Hospital to Earn ‘2015 Most Wired Award’

By ChaseYavondaC

A barcode is scanned as a demonstration of one of the processes UAMS has in place for the access, management and protection of patient information.

A barcode is scanned as a demonstration of one of the processes UAMS has in place for the access, management and protection of patient information.

Only 338 of the 2,213 hospitals surveyed by CHIME in 2015 received the Most Wired Award. The award winners showed excellence in information technology leadership in addressing patient care, customer service, business processes and safety issues. The hospitals named this year also are at the forefront in health data security and patient engagement.

“When UAMS implemented an integrated electronic health record over a year ago, it was a game changer,” said Rhonda Jorden, UAMS chief information officer. “Finally, the majority of information needed to care for the patient was in one user interface for our health care team. Having this integrated information, in conjunction with other efficiency and performance initiatives, has enabled UAMS to use data to streamline workflows and improve patient care.”

Jorden points to a data connection while discussing server technology with Thomas Powell, M.D., UAMS Medical Center chief medical information officer.

Jorden points to a data connection while discussing server technology with Thomas Powell, M.D., UAMS Medical Center chief medical information officer.

Roxane Townsend, M.D., UAMS Medical Center CEO, said health care teams are using improved access to accurate data to identify areas to improve care and measure the success of medical interventions.

“In addition, the online patient portal has been enthusiastically embraced by our patients and families to access information and communicate with their care team,” Townsend said.

Receiving the Most Wired Award for 2015 is a result of more than three years of hard work by the UAMS Information Technology Division and the Clinical Enterprise to implement and optimize the UConnect electronic health record system and associated clinical software applications as well as the infrastructure that supported them, Jorden said.