01 Dec 2006
The University Hospitals of Coventry and Warwickshire have improved control over their patient records stored in their legacy system.
The University Hospitals of Coventry and Warwickshire ‘super’ hospital is the largest in the country, seeing over one million patients a year and has over 30,000 appointments each week.
To ensure vital hospital space was not consumed in the physical storage of masses of paper; it was decided to outsource storage and delivery of patient records to a partner from the private sector, TNT.
The hospital has used a system from Datawatch to convert the daily list of records generated by the legacy system to a format that can be shared with the TNT systems.
Nick Elliott, chief technology officer at UHCW, says the system is an improvement.
'It’s much better than a programming approach. It makes the system easier to maintain, as models and projects can be altered or developed by non-technical staff, so the process is not dependent on IT resources,' he said.
What do you think? Email us at feedback@computing.co.uk
Further Reading:
Hospital registers a boost from RFID
Have your say on this article
Newsletters
Latest stories from Management
Latest videos
You may also like
Management jobs
Technology Patent Wars
Case studies from large organisations across all sectors
... And rich media, and flexible working, and peaks in traffic ...
Upcoming Events
Join us for this Computing web seminar, in which the Head of BI at the Co-operative Group Nick Colebourn will be explaining just how he reigned in the Group’s sprawling database estate and how significant savings were realised and data quality improved as a result.
Date: 31 May 2012
Time: 11:00 AM
Live June 13th 11:00am: Register now. During this web seminar we will be looking at the sorts of incidents that can bring data centres grinding to a halt and what can be done about them.
Date: 13 Jun 2012
Time: 11:00 am
Receive the latest jobs direct to your inbox
Are you being paid what you are worth?