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OR Technology: A Glimpse Into The Future

01/18/2010

As we move into 2010, a new wave of technology awaits us. Highly-developed health information technology (HIT)-driven systems and equipment are becoming the standard in many operating rooms (ORs), whether they are in a single-specialty ambulatory surgery centers (ASCs) or advanced surgical hospitals. It is important to stay up-to-date on these new technologies which not only reduce medical errors, but improve patient comfort and post discharge follow-up. The following case studies highlight this trend.

Enhancing Communication, Collaboration and Education: An Olympus Case Study

Three years after adopting integrated ENDOALPHA ORs, Penn State Hershey Medical Center is ready for more. As the only teaching hospital in central Pennsylvania, Penn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center is one of the area’s largest healthcare providers. The hospital is equipped with 23 surgical suites and its department of surgery performs more than 19,000 procedures annually.

Staying Ahead of the Technology Curve

As industry trends move toward minimally invasive techniques, the hospital was quick to understand the benefits of integrated surgical suites as a way to stay competitive with the specialized technology demands of increasingly sophisticated procedures. “Several years ago, we realized we had a need for advanced, integrated technologies in our OR as we anticipated the convergence of laparoscopic and flexible endoscopic instrumentation,” says Randy Haluck, MD, professor of surgery and division chief for minimally invasive surgery and bariatrics. “We also recognized the need for a sophisticated system relative to data acquisition, storage, and transfer.”

Penn State Hershey began the process of integration in 2005, building three new Olympus ENDOALPHA surgical suites in 2006 and then converting two existing ORs to ENDOALPHAs the following year. The hospital anticipates completion of four more integrated ORs, for a total of 27 surgical rooms with one-third of them set up as state-of-the-art ENDOALPHAs this year.

Taking a Comprehensive Approach

True systems integration goes beyond the equipment and operating platform. It also takes into account the ergonomic design, workflow and technology optimization of each surgical suite. This means designing rooms with ceiling-mounted booms for holding imaging equipment and monitors off the floor, allowing for more efficient post-procedure clean-up and ergonomic positioning of monitors during the procedure. It means integrated equipment (scopes, imaging platforms, monitors, video and accessories) that work together and can be easily interchanged during a procedure. And it means a cohesive information management system for patient and procedural data, images, and audio that can be captured, stored, and retrieved from both inside and outside the sterile field. “We needed to have multiple surgical services using the same operating room, between general surgery, urology and minimally invasive GYN surgery,” says Gerald Harkins, MD, medical director for minimally invasive GYN surgery. “We’re all able to function in the ENDOALPHA laparoscopic suites, and it’s been a fantastic platform for that utilization.”

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