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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 5 page report discusses the implementation of a Windows NT server in a medium-sized hospital. The implementation of a Windows NT network at the hospital will enable users to run cross-hospital and cross-service line analysis, while also being able to extract, transform and map data from multiple sites. The options available to a medium-sized hospital using such a system are far and beyond the hospital that relies upon the antiquated system of charts, notes, and suppositions on the part of the medical personnel. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_BWnet.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
considered prior to establishing a Windows NT-based network for a medium-sized hospital. Certainly, any modern business environment must deal with a certain level of chaos and uncertainty when making
a major change to its operational structure. Such managed chaos is at even a greater level in the typical hospital. However, the implementation of the network server will
act as a valuable tool in improving a broad range of efficiencies. Simpson (1995) notes that any company should not expect major immediate cost savings from the move to
client server, but should focus on decreasing the time involved in maintenance and modification. A proper client server implementation should take from three to five years to complete. The
implementation of a network at the hospital will enables users to run cross-hospital and cross-service line analysis, while also being able to extract, transform and map data from multiple sites.
Employees in one area of the hospital will be able to pull in data regarding any patient or any service from a variety of sources, thus assuring a greater continuity
of care as well as improved patient management. While networked systems are more common at multiple-hospital corporations or larger hospital campuses, they still prove to be an invaluable resource
for medium and even smaller individual hospitals. Hospital administrators must both understand and communicate the fact that the hospital will be able to make the switch to a server
architecture, without affecting the hospitals basic patient care and business functions. The hospital will be able to gradually customize its software applications as well as add other functionality after the
initial installation. In other words, administrators must realize the process can be relatively painless. Needs and Considerations According to Paul (1995), for
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