Artificial Intelligence | News | Insights | AiThority
[bsfp-cryptocurrency style=”widget-18″ align=”marquee” columns=”6″ coins=”selected” coins-count=”6″ coins-selected=”BTC,ETH,XRP,LTC,EOS,ADA,XLM,NEO,LTC,EOS,XEM,DASH,USDT,BNB,QTUM,XVG,ONT,ZEC,STEEM” currency=”USD” title=”Cryptocurrency Widget” show_title=”0″ icon=”” scheme=”light” bs-show-desktop=”1″ bs-show-tablet=”1″ bs-show-phone=”1″ custom-css-class=”” custom-id=”” css=”.vc_custom_1523079266073{margin-bottom: 0px !important;padding-top: 0px !important;padding-bottom: 0px !important;}”]

NewYork-Presbyterian, LiveOnNy and Transplant Connect Launch Ireferral(SM) Automated Donor Referral Technology to Increase Donation and Transplantation Across New York City

  • Collaboration Around New Innovative Technology Improves Processes and May Help Save Lives in New York Through Donation and Transplantation

NewYork-Presbyterian, together with LiveOnNY, the nonprofit organ procurement organization (OPO) for the greater New York City area, and innovative Los Angeles-based medical software provider, Transplant Connect, collaborated to automate mission-critical hospital and OPO workflows across the greater New York City area.

Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) and other regulations mandate that all hospitals in New York and across the United States notify their assigned OPO of potential organ, tissue and eye donors within a specified time frame. The phone-based referral process in place requires nurses to manually relay to the OPO medical and other information needed to begin the donation process and can be time-consuming.

Recommended AI News: CivicScience, Media And Tech Titans Join Forces To Launch New Digital Ad Platform

NewYork-Presbyterian, LiveOnNY and Transplant Connect began work in early 2021 to implement iReferralSM – a new interoperability-based approach created by Transplant Connect to streamline and automate the donor referral process.  Since then, clinical triggers have been implemented into NewYork-Presbyterian’s electronic health record (EHR) system and the secure interface was achieved, tested, and launched with LiveOnNY’s iTransplantSM electronic medical record system provided by Transplant Connect.  Automated Best Practice Alerts notify NewYork-Presbyterian nurses of potential organ, tissue and eye donors, and a streamlined, clinician-initiated workflow allows medical staff to rapidly confirm key information and securely transmit the referral electronically in only seconds – a stark contrast to the 20-30 minutes required by the old, phone-based referral process.

Through the efforts of NewYork-Presbyterian, LiveOnNY and Transplant Connect, iReferral has been launched at seven NewYork-Presbyterian hospital campuses, including: NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia University Irving Medical Center, NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center, NewYork-Presbyterian Allen Hospital, NewYork-Presbyterian Lower Manhattan Hospital, NewYork-Presbyterian Morgan Stanley Children’s Hospital, NewYork-Presbyterian Queens and NewYork-Presbyterian Lawrence Hospital.  The interface has helped streamline the process, allowing nurses to spend more time with their patients.

“As an enterprise, we are relentless in our pursuit of improving the patient experience and outcomes,” said Chif Umejei, Vice President of Information Technology at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital. “This is a classic example of the meaningful utilization of technology to impact lives of patients and caregivers.”

Related Posts
1 of 40,405

“At LiveOnNY we feel that iReferral is truly the future of organ, eye and tissue donation. This new system will help us and our partners save countless lives,” said LiveOnNY President and CEO Helen Irving. “Thank you to Transplant Connect and to NewYork-Presbyterian for embracing this advanced technology.”

Recommended AI News: Ryan Hires Rebekah Gardner as Principal and Senior Vice President, Chief Clients and Markets Officer

Transplant Connect’s Founder and CEO, John Piano, shared:  “Of the many iReferral Interfaces launched or currently in implementation, this NewYork-Presbyterian-LiveOnNY effort was noteworthy for a number of reasons – first, NewYork-Presbyterian’s ability to rapidly complete the steps to launch iReferral in only a few short months and, second, by launching across multiple NewYork-Presbyterian locations, the measurable impact was very substantial – liberating valuable NewYork-Presbyterian nursing resources every day while enabling more lives to be saved and healed through donation-transplantation in New York and beyond.”

About NYP:  NewYork-Presbyterian is one of the nation’s most comprehensive, integrated academic healthcare systems, encompassing 10 hospitals across the Greater New York area, more than 200 primary and specialty care clinics and medical groups, and an array of telemedicine services.

A leader in medical education, NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital is the only academic medical center in the nation affiliated with two world-class medical schools, Weill Cornell Medicine and Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons. This collaboration means patients have access to the country’s leading physicians, the full range of medical specialties, latest innovations in care, and research that is developing c**** and saving lives.

Ranked the #4 hospital in the nation and #1 in New York in U.S. News & World Report’s Best Hospitals rankings, NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital is also recognized as among the best in the nation in the U.S. News Best Children’s Hospitals rankings. Founded nearly 250 years ago, NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital has a long legacy of medical breakthroughs and innovation, from the invention of the Pap test to pioneering the groundbreaking heart valve replacement procedure called TAVR.

NewYork-Presbyterian’s 48,000 employees and affiliated physicians are dedicated to providing the highest quality, most compassionate care to New Yorkers and patients from across the country and around the world.

Recommended AI News: Vertex Continues Industry Leadership With Oracle As A Preferred Cloud Infrastructure Partner

Comments are closed.