Computerworld
Quick Menu
Search



Ads by TechWords

See your link here


Subscribe to our e-mail newsletters
For more info on a specific newsletter, click the title. Details will be displayed in a new window.
IT Management
Computerworld Daily News (First Look and Wrap-Up)
Computerworld Blogs Newsletter
The Weekly Top 10
More E-Mail Newsletters 
Computerworld 2007Subscribe to Computerworld
40 years of the most authoritative source of news and information for IT leaders.

Pittsburgh medical center taps IBM for IT consolidation

The $402M project is expected to cut costs, support e-health records
Heather Havenstein   Today’s Top Stories   or  Other Management Stories  
 

Sign up to receive Management Resource Alerts

April 28, 2005 (Computerworld) -- The University of Pittsburgh Medical Center (UPMC) has tapped IBM for a $402 million project to consolidate its IT infrastructure to reduce operating costs and support new applications like electronic health records.
The eight-year deal, set to be announced today, will also include joint investment in research and development of new health care technology, such as methods to detect nationwide epidemics or bioterrorist attacks.
Paul Sikora, director of production services at the medical center, said his organization will standardize on IBM hardware and software to replace existing technology from myriad vendors, including Hewlett-Packard Co., Sun Microsystems Inc., Hitachi Data Systems Corp. and EMC Corp.
"We can't continue to build out our infrastructure in that form because it takes too much support, too much expertise, to make it practical," he said. "We will have eliminated a number of operating systems and standardized on a set of hardware and a set of tools to enable us to manage according to service levels rather than technology silos."
As a result, the medical center will reduce its IT operating costs by 15% to 20% within three years, Sikora said. As part of the consolidation, UPMC will reduce its operating systems from nine to three, the number of servers from 786 to 305, and its storage arrays from 40 to two.
The consolidated infrastructure will allow UPMC to more easily build out its electronic medical records system, which it has been developing for the past four years, said Nancy Landman, UPMC's director of business development and operations.
"It is not as simple as implementing one application and putting it up and it runs and provides the information," she said. "When you are looking at patient information ... there are multiple sources of information that feed into that. The integration needs in the electronic health records environment are just huge and continue to grow."
The cost savings from the consolidation will help fund more strategic initiatives like an electronic physician order entry system, Landman said.
"Before, the physician would enter orders on paper charts, and there was no second-guessing that physician on what they were doing," she said. "Now, with the data we are collecting and the analytical tools that are available, we can take best practices and intervene at that point of care. We can say, 'The lab values show this medication might not be the best medication.' "
The deal represents IBM's largest win so far in the health care sector for its on-demand computing initiative, said Neil de Crescenzo, IBM's health care industry leader.
IBM and UPMC jointly will invest a minimum of $50 million on research and development, with a possible joint

Continued...
1 | 2 | NEXT  



Print this Story Send Us Feedback E-mail this Story Digg! Digg this Story Slashdot this Story
"An approaching hurricane fortuitously recalls the famous statement on planning from Eisenhower. We should heed his words...." Read more...
"Microsoft now has 10 million paying customers for its Microsoft Desktop Optimization Pack (MDOP), which is the license which businesses..." Read more...
Read more Management posts or See all Blogs
iPhone 3G owner sues Apple, AT&T over dropped calls, app crashes
Mozilla: Firefox is faster than Chrome
Upcoming Microsoft patch lineup could be 'massive,' says researcher
More top stories...
Microsoft explains Seinfeld-Windows TV ad: just a 'teaser'
Continuing coverage: Google's Chrome browser
Social Security numbers exposed on Iowa land-records Web site
Users of Windows XP SP3 who try out IE8 Beta 2 won't be able to uninstall either one under certain circumstances.
Google has gone from innovative upstart to fat-and-happy industry leader in what seems like record time. Preston Gralla explains.
Microsoft's latest beta of IE8 includes better tab management, new services such as Web Slices and Accelerators, and the new 'porn mode.'
These leading-edge graduate schools are moving at the pace of the IT workplace, delivering coursework that's relevant to today's IT professionals.
Reviews, analyses, how-tos, visual tours, hot issues and predictions about Microsoft's new OS.
Four years from now, the IT field will be a vastly different place. Will you be ready?
All Zones
Application Performance Zone
Business Continuity Zone
The File Data Management Zone
Security Management Zone
ITIL Best Practices Zone
The SAS Zone
Business Intelligence and Analytics Zone
Windows Protection Zone
Identity & Security Management Zone

Ads by TechWords

See your link here
Google's Universal Search for Business
Google's Universal Search for Business
View this exclusive webcast, free, compliments of Google!
Go to the webcast 
Learn-Fast Guide: Software as a Service is Growing Up
Download this Computerworld Executive Briefing, a $195 value, for free! Compliments of Akamai.
(Source: Computerworld) SaaS is here to stay as an application delivery channel. You will be using it, but will you do so wisely? This Learn-Fast Guide will prepare you for software delivered over the Web. From security issues to contract negotiations, there's a lot to consider ... and a lot to gain.
Download this executive briefing download
The Importance of Application Management
Get this white paper now!
(Source: Dell) Efficient desktop application management is essential in normal day-to-day operations of any company. Whether you are introducing a new application or implementing an OS migration, the goal is the same: minimize disruptions and ensure user productivity throughout the process.
Download this white paper go
White Papers
Read up on the latest ideas and technologies from companies that sell hardware, software and services.
Death to PST: Hidden Cost of Email Mismanagement
Extend, Replace, or Convert; which is the best way forward for COBOL Applications?
The Trend from Unix to Linux in SAP Data Centers
View more whitepapers