The trial will deliver wireless voice communications and radio frequency
identification (RFID) equipment tracking to 75 clinicians and administrators.
Advertisement
“Clinicians were complaining about poor communications and the fact that they
often had to walk around the wards to find people,” said Doug Howe, head of
client services at the directorate of finance and ICT at the Royal London
Hospital.
The wireless network will also support
Philips’
Aeroscout asset tracking solution, which embeds passive RFID tags in medical
equipment to make sure it can be properly located.
“It tracks high-value medical equipment and small devices that people often
stow away in drawers around the hospital, and which can take weeks to find,”
said Howe.
The trial covers less than five per cent of the Trust’s hospital floor space,
but Howe says the Aerohive test network can be quickly and easily expanded to
cover new £1bn facilities due to be added to Barts and the Royal London hospital
by 2012.
“We are consolidating three sites into two and, in effect, building a new
hospital, so we wanted to try a new technology. The idea is to gain support
among medical staff,” said Howe.
A total of 77 802.11n-enabled access points have been installed around the A
&E department.
Howe says Barts is looking at ways to use the faster data rates offered by
Aerohive’s 802.11n APs to support video streaming, live teleconferencing and
other web-based communications between medical teams.
Do you agree?
Have your say on this article