Oakville Beaver, 24 May 2018, p. 46

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in si de ha lto n. co m O ak vi lle B ea ve r | T hu rs da y, M ay 24 ,2 01 8 | 46464 www.oakvillefamilyribfest.com Kick off your summer at Oakville's biggest Outdoor Summer Festival Lend a hand and make a difference Bring your friends and do something good together, while you have a good time Earn volunteer hours for school June 22 to 24 2018 sheridan college, trafalgar road campus JOIN OUR VOLUNTEER TEAM HELP ROTARY HELP OTHERS, IN OUR COMMUNITY AND AROUND THE WORLD!PERSONAL INJURY MEDICALMALPRACTICE Experienced Trial Lawyers Serving Oakville, Milton and Burlington SWLawyers.ca 1540 Cornwall Road Suite 106, Oakville905.842.3838 in 2015 and power generat- ed by it is sold to provide revenue to the Oakville Hospital Foundation. Hatch has stated the ar- ray will provide $6.85 mil- lion to the Oakville Hospi- tal Foundation over the next 20 years. Bailey also talked about how the hospital's design will allow it to add capacity as the community grows without having to resort to costly renovations. Another feature Bailey mentioned was the auto- mation available in the hospital's laboratory. He said this automation provides accurate process- ing of specimens and can deliver results in as little as 25-27 minutes. Even the bedpan sani- tizer subscribes to the smart hospital philosophy, sending a signal to building staff when it is getting low on detergent. While this may seem ex- treme Bailey pointed out this system plays an im- portant role in infection control. Saggar said an impor- tant aspect in designing the hospital was ensuring all its systems could talk to each other. For this reason Halton Healthcare partnered with Cisco Canada to install a medical grade network within the facility. Saggar said the network is resilient and secure and allows for things like a re- al-time locator system for babies, who may be at risk of abduction, or high-risk patients, like someone with dementia, who may wander away from their room. The hospital also has a patient flow system, which lets family members see what stage their loved ones are at in their treatment without having to find and ask a staff member. As a physician may be required to sign onto mul- tiple computers at multiple locations during the course of their duties one other feature Saggar dis- cussed involves swipe cards that let hospital staff sign on to various comput- ers without having to sit down, input a password and log on. Saggar said these swipe cards and other smart technology save time and allow the hospital staff to spend more time helping patients. He pointed out this strategy appears to be working because in the first three months after the new OTMH facility opened surveys recorded a 50 per cent increase in patient satisfaction. Gidwani, a former regis- tered nurse, noted the speed of innovation is ac- celerating and more can be done to make use of evolv- ing technology. She also discussed the importance of health care apps and how essential it is to get these technical inno- vations right since people's lives are on the line. NEWS lContinued from page 40 Automation enables accurate processing at hospital lab Bill Bailey, Vice President, Redevelopment, Halton Healthcare(far left); Sandy Saggar Chief Information Officer, Halton Healthcare; Shanti Gidwani National Senior Director, Healthcare, Cisco Canada speak at an Oakville Chamber of Commerce breakfast on improvements to hospital technology. Justin Mercier photographer

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