FW: Today's Live Webcast: Evidence-based Design Meets Patient Safety

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Feb 26, 2009, 10:35:52 AM2/26/09
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From: HEALTHCARE DESIGN Webinars [mailto:webi...@email-vendomeconferences.com]
Sent: 26 Februari 2009 22:26
To: nov...@cbn.net.id
Subject: Today's Live Webcast: Evidence-based Design Meets Patient Safety

 

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February 2009
Healthcare Design Feb08



Upcoming Live Webcasts

Now more than ever, your staff has to know the latest trends and strategies that the top healthcare organizations are using to get projects done on time and on budget. And you need to make this strategic learning cost effective. This live webinar series from HEALTHCARE DESIGN magazine offers you the chance to earn one hour of CE in the AIA’s HSW category right from your desk. No travel and no time lost from your work.


Evidence-based Design Meets Patient Safety

TODAY - Thursday, February 26, 2009
1 p.m. Eastern; Noon Central; 11 a.m. Mountain; 10 a.m. Pacific

Description

This session will present innovative and practical facility design concepts that incorporate significant patient safety and quality-of-care improvements. Participants will understand and learn Safe by Design principles as developed by the National Learning Lab in 2002. The four areas of recommendation that we will address include:

1.     Latent Conditions

2.     Active Failures

3.     Facility Process Recommendations

4.     Safety Culture Recommendations

Multiple case studies will be presented, including St. Joseph’s Community Hospital, Boca Raton Community Hospital, University of Minnesota-Fairview Children’s Hospital, and Dana-Farber Cancer Institute.

Outcomes of these applications on quality and safety will be discussed, including data from St. Joseph Community Hospital’s AHRQ grant.

Learning Objectives

  • Understand the critical background for safe design
  • Apply safe by design principles to facility development.
  • Understand the process recommendations and their impact.
  • Understand and apply safety science to facility design, culture and process compared to evidence-based design.

About the Speaker

John Reiling, MBA, MHA, PhD
President/CEO
Safe by Design

Dr. Reiling has a 30 year career in health care administration. He has been recognized as one of the “50 Health Care Leaders for the 21st Century” by American Hospital Association. He consults with hospitals and health systems across the country regarding facility and patient care designs that emphasize safety, error reduction and quality.

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Trends in Health Care IT: Digital Clinical Systems & the Impact on Data Center Management

Thursday, March 5, 2009
1 p.m. Eastern; Noon Central; 11 a.m. Mountain; 10 a.m. Pacific

Description

Join us for this unique session that looks at the scientific research and healthcare industry demands on the mission critical infrastructure.
Today’s healthcare and research organizations require a mission critical infrastructure that satisfies the needs of professionals who rely increasingly on fast and secure access to information and communications.

In the modern hospital, virtually all clinical functions are supported in the data center. From PAC’s (digital radiology), digital pharmacy, digital medical records, digital pathology, to doctors with wireless tablet PC’s at the bedside, the health of the patient is tied to the reliability of the data center. Loss of life is always at the forefront of everyone’s mind, but downtime has other impacts as well.

Convergence of technology and tighter integrations have forced today’s hospital data center to support non-typical application and data servers for systems such as nurse call, infant protection, security, and clinical messaging engines.

Planning the space and support requirements in the data center as well as determining the correct infrastructure for delivery and access to the information is critical.

Learning Objectives

  • The rapid deployment of digital clinical systems is having a huge impact on the data center. What are the issues, and how can they be addressed.
  • Virtualization in the data center can help, but how much? Projected savings can be quantified.
  • There are different levels of risk related to disaster recovery. Developing a plan for levels of DR can result big savings.

About the Speaker

R. Stephen Spinazzola
Vice President and Firwide Director, MEP Engineering Studio
RTKL

As Vice President and firmwide Director of RTKL’s MEP Engineering Studio, Steve Spinazzola offers more than 27 years of experience in both mechanical design and project management on corporate, mission-critical, educational, health and science, retail, and institutional projects. Steve holds a Bachelor of Architectural Engineering degree from Pennsylvania State University.

Steve is a registered professional engineer in more than 30 states, and is co-inventor of an advanced data center cooling technology that has six patents and is currently being deployed in data centers all over the world.

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If you have questions, contact Richard Jarvis at Vendome Group 212-812-1413 for more information

 

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