Difference between revisions of "ClinicStation"

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ClinicStation was developed by M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in response to internal needs for an EMR and several previous failed EMR deployments. It was developed by Dr. Kevin McEnery and Charles Suitor as an expansion of a successful radiology PACS initiative [1]. It was first deployed as a web application in 1999 with about 30 clinical applications. It was rewritten as an n-tier [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Service-oriented_architecture service-oriented architecture] (SOA) back-end coupled with a desktop application in 2007 and today has about 70 clinical applications [2]. The SOA enables ClinicStation to expose more than 40 different data sources (internally developed and commercial software) to clinicians within a single interface [3]. It also enables other M.D. Anderson applications to draw on ClinicStation data, such as the RadStation (for radiology), PathStation (for pathology), ResearchStation (for research) and ClinicStation Outbound (a web portal for patients and outside physicians). ClinicStation has scaled from around 1,500 users in its early stages to over 8,000 today.
 
ClinicStation was developed by M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in response to internal needs for an EMR and several previous failed EMR deployments. It was developed by Dr. Kevin McEnery and Charles Suitor as an expansion of a successful radiology PACS initiative [1]. It was first deployed as a web application in 1999 with about 30 clinical applications. It was rewritten as an n-tier [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Service-oriented_architecture service-oriented architecture] (SOA) back-end coupled with a desktop application in 2007 and today has about 70 clinical applications [2]. The SOA enables ClinicStation to expose more than 40 different data sources (internally developed and commercial software) to clinicians within a single interface [3]. It also enables other M.D. Anderson applications to draw on ClinicStation data, such as the RadStation (for radiology), PathStation (for pathology), ResearchStation (for research) and ClinicStation Outbound (a web portal for patients and outside physicians). ClinicStation has scaled from around 1,500 users in its early stages to over 8,000 today.
  
1 http://www.imagingeconomics.com/issues/articles/2003-02_01.asp
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1 George Wiley. Radiology Without Walls. Imaging Economics Feb 2003 [http://www.imagingeconomics.com/issues/articles/2003-02_01.asp]
  
2 http://www.cwhonors.org/CaseStudy/viewCaseStudy2009.asp?NominationID=135&Username=UTmDa
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2 University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center "ClinicStation Case Study" 2009. [http://www.cwhonors.org/CaseStudy/viewCaseStudy2009.asp?NominationID=135&Username=UTmDa]
  
3 http://www.microsoft.com/casestudies/Case_Study_Detail.aspx?CaseStudyID=4000000916
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3 Cancer Center Saves Time and Money, Improves Care with Medical Record Solution. Microsoft Case Studies [http://www.microsoft.com/casestudies/Case_Study_Detail.aspx?CaseStudyID=4000000916]
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4 Dr. Kevin McEnrery background and current work roles [http://www.mdanderson.org/education-and-research/resources-for-professionals/clinical-tools-and-resources/clinical-safety-and-effectiveness-educational-program/faculty/index.html]

Revision as of 04:40, 21 September 2009

ClinicStation was developed by M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in response to internal needs for an EMR and several previous failed EMR deployments. It was developed by Dr. Kevin McEnery and Charles Suitor as an expansion of a successful radiology PACS initiative [1]. It was first deployed as a web application in 1999 with about 30 clinical applications. It was rewritten as an n-tier service-oriented architecture (SOA) back-end coupled with a desktop application in 2007 and today has about 70 clinical applications [2]. The SOA enables ClinicStation to expose more than 40 different data sources (internally developed and commercial software) to clinicians within a single interface [3]. It also enables other M.D. Anderson applications to draw on ClinicStation data, such as the RadStation (for radiology), PathStation (for pathology), ResearchStation (for research) and ClinicStation Outbound (a web portal for patients and outside physicians). ClinicStation has scaled from around 1,500 users in its early stages to over 8,000 today.

1 George Wiley. Radiology Without Walls. Imaging Economics Feb 2003 [1]

2 University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center "ClinicStation Case Study" 2009. [2]

3 Cancer Center Saves Time and Money, Improves Care with Medical Record Solution. Microsoft Case Studies [3]

4 Dr. Kevin McEnrery background and current work roles [4]