
LibertyHealth upgraded its wireless network to assure users had the 24-hour access needed by healthcare applications.
Patients’ vital signs are not the only information LibertyHealth needs to monitor at its hospitals, health centers and other facilities in the Jersey City, N.J., region. From high-tech infant care and adult surgery to in-hospital rehabilitation and home-care services, the system’s medical personnel depend on a wide range of networked applications. These, in turn, depend on a reliable wireless network.

Two systems replace traditional paper-based informed-consent process with an electronic time-out checklist integrated into electronic records.
The "time-out" process is an established, but often overlooked, mechanism for preventing a critical patient-safety issue: wrong-site/wrong-procedure/wrong-patient surgery. At a minimum, this process involves a standard by which members of the surgical team are required to agree on the correct patient identity, the correct procedure site and the procedure to be performed.


Today, barely more than a quarter of physicians use electronic medical records (EMR) in an ambulatory setting, and roughly only 10 percent of hospitals have the technology to allow physicians to enter orders directly into a computer for transmission to the laboratory, pharmacy or other units. The consolidation inherent in a move to EMR has a number of implications, including the increased importance of IT infrastructure recovery capabilities.
Healthcare system replaces time-consuming review process with a content-management system for developing and maintaining evidence-based order sets.