Healthcare organizations become increasingly dependent on their technology infrastructure as they migrate to Electronic Medical Record (EMR). Network Foundations provides the premiere cost-effective way to mange technology without diverting resources from patient care.
Independent Physicians Groups
The migration to EMR and HIPAA compliance are forcing physician groups to incorporate significant amounts of new technology in their medical practice. These groups face the risk of substantial revenue loss from computer downtime if technology is not implemented properly.
Because technology is always advancing, it requires increased spending on infrastructure and human assets to be properly maintained. A lack of proper technology maintenance has the potential to create a significant negative impact on patient care. As technology complexities grow, the expertise needed to manage and deliver technology becomes critical. Network Foundations gives physician groups the opportunity to use technology without the responsibility of owning or managing it.
Network Foundations delivers a set of solutions that combines technology consulting, support services, and utility computing to provide independent physician groups with a fully supported network infrastructure under a fixed monthly fee with no long-term contracts.
Please see our Migration Path to Utility Computing to see how this process works and get more information about the product services and solutions that we deliver.
Community Healthcare Centers
Technology expenditures are a serious concern for community healthcare centers because of their limited financial resources and the scrutiny they are often under for the responsible use of those limited funds. Traditionally, technology has been a lower priority for of community healthcare centers, and many are behind the curve for EMR rollout and HIPAA compliance. Without proper computing resources, many of these healthcare organizations fall into a cycle of fiscal waste by fixing problems rather than establishing a stable technology infrastructure.
The need to use grant dollars efficiently makes community healthcare centers ideal candidates for our hybrid approach of technology consulting and utility computing. Within these organizations, we can rapidly stabilize environments, supplement or restructure IT departments with resources to reduce operational support costs, maximize the efficiency of existing systems, and transition non-critical applications to our virtualized environments. This allows community-focused healthcare organizations to allocate precious grant dollars where they need to go most – toward the continuous improvement of patient care and new healthcare programs.
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