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by efitz
695 days ago
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I was advocating for a paper fall back. That means that WHILE the computers are running, you must create a paper record, eg “medication x administered at time y”, etc., hence the receipt printers, which are cheap and low-dependency. The grandparent indicated that the problem was that when all tow computers went down, they couldn’t look up what had already been done for the patient. I suggested a simple solution for that - receipt printers. After the computers fail you tape the receipt to the wall and fall pack to pen and paper until the computers come back up. I completely understand the scale of the outage today. I am saying that it was a stupid decision and possibly criminally negligent to make a life critical process dependent on the availability of a distributed IT application not specifically designed for life critical availability. I strongly stand by that POV. |
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Just so I understand what you are saying you are proposing that we drown our hospital rooms in paper receipt constantly. In the off chance the computers go down very rarely?
Do you see any possible drawbacks with your proposed solution?
> possibly criminally negligent to make a life critical process dependent on the availability of a distributed IT application
What process is not “life critical” in a hospital? Do you suggest that we don’t use IT at all?