
Grove Hill’s new cabling infrastructure supports both its bandwidth and flexibility needs in a single solution.
A common dilemma for IT professionals is selecting a network infrastructure that can offer future-proof support of the organization’s most bandwidth-intensive applications and users without over compensating for less speed-critical connectivity needs. A healthcare organization could install multiple channels of varying cable types and performance levels or, as Connecticut-based Grove Hill Medical Center did – choose a single cabling solution.
Grove Hill Medical Center offers services ranging from routine check-ups to the latest diagnostic imaging. Home to more than 70 physicians, Grove Hill covers 19 medical specialties, including cardiology, oncology, orthopedics and radiology, as well as housing administrative and patient-service offices. When Grove Hill began the upgrade to its network cabling infrastructure, it did so with a wide range of network applications, users and challenges in mind.
Leading healthcare organization explores the benefits and challenges of voice-over-Internet-protocol technology.
When ProMedica Health Systems of Ohio and Michigan broke ground on its largest construction effort to date – a state-of-the-art campus at Toledo Hospital and Toledo Children’s Hospital – it also overhauled its 20-year-old phone system, deploying a voice-over-Internet-protocol (VoIP) network.
"We knew that VoIP technology promised countless business benefits well suited to healthcare services," explains Bruce Meyer, technical coordinator for the voice-and-data infrastructure at ProMedica Health Systems. "We also knew that with those benefits came increased risk of system downtime and performance problems. In an emergency situation, our staff doesn’t have the luxury of time to find another phone if theirs is not working, so we needed an effective, reliable solution that we could manage end to end."



