Ortivus Knowledge Center

The Knowledge Center is an evolving repository of news items, technical reports and other useful documents that we, our customers, the market, researcher, partners, media and others find interesting.

We hope that the material assembled here, which represents many points of view, will promote a deeper understanding of the interesting area in which we work.

The Knowledge Center is organized according to the categories in the left column.
Make your choice by selecting the appropriate category.
You can also search directly by tags. Available tags are also presented in the left column.

 

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    Case report Uppsala Date added: 03/05/2010Tags: ambulance, case report, ePR, MobiMed

    New electronic patient record (ePR) makes patient care at the Academic hospital more efficient. Pre-hospital care in the ambulance is becoming more important, since many medical procedures are carried out before patients arrive at the hospital. The ambulance services in Uppsala County in Sweden are precursors within the ambulance IT field as they use research of their own as well as of others in order to make the care chain more efficient. When the organisation wanted to improve their patient record management they turned to Ortivus. Implementing MobiMed ePR has resulted in simplified work processes for the staff. The system also provides the organisation with a better source for evaluation and research. Above all, the patient information is now significantly more structured and relevant and the staff, both in the ambulance and at the hospital, has gained access to the information in a completely new and innovative manner. Read more

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    Case report Kronoberg Date added: 03/05/2010Tags: case report, ePR, Kronoberg, telemedicine, training

    The Ambulance Service of Kronoberg county in Sweden equipped it’s 26 ambulances with Ortivus’ MobiMed in 2007. Already from the beginning the decision was to implement the full MobiMed package, i.e. monitoring, telemedicine and electronic patient record. One major driver for the decision was to replace the old inefficient way of using handwritten ambulance patient records. Another driver was to establish an ICT platform supporting a continuously more process-oriented ambulance service with new and increasing demands on providing care at various levels in the society. Read more

Showing 1-2 of 2