The New Orleans Patient Tracking System (PTS)

1997 ◽  
Vol 14 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 73-98 ◽  
Author(s):  
James M. Becnel ◽  
Scott Ray ◽  
Thomas M. Wolf ◽  
Tracy Lotten ◽  
Joshua Williams ◽  
...  
2011 ◽  
Vol 26 (S1) ◽  
pp. s42-s42
Author(s):  
K. Andress ◽  
E. Downey

IntroductionAssociated with hospital evacuation is the need to track multiple patient evacuees from point of origination to final hospital reception. Patient tracking, a component of the hospital emergency operations plan, is vital to patient care; family association, resource management, financial reimbursement, risk management, and repatriation. Tracking strategies and plans can include a variety of vendors, hardware, software, and coordination issues. Hospital evacuee tracking plans and platforms exist at multiple jurisdictional levels but may not be interoperable.MethodsThree patient tracking platforms representing a local, state and federal application were used during a multi-hospital evacuation exercise, initiated in New Orleans, Louisiana, May 2010. Simulated patients were flown and tracked to multiple patient reception centers in the southern United States, including the Federal Coordinating Center in Shreveport, Louisiana, and receiving National Disaster Medical System hospitals. This review summarizes tracking operations, patient data characteristics captured and interoperability at the Shreveport reception location.Results7 New Orleans hospitals entered 51 patients for evacuation into Louisiana's web-based, At-Risk-Registry (ARR) database including 8 patient identifiers each. ARR data was shared with federal and Louisiana Region 7 patient evacuee receivers for flight manifest construction and reception planning. 34 ARR evacuee patients were indicated for the Shreveport, Louisiana, reception site. 34 patients with 6 identifying characteristics were entered from ARR into EMTrack, the local patient tracking system. A C130 arrived with a TRAC2ES manifest of 20 simulated patients with 6 patient data characteristics. The local tracking system was reconfigured for the hardcopy manifest; simulated patients were received at the airport; transported and received at local hospitals.ConclusionsTracking system interoperability may be challenged by tracking technologies, jurisdictional requirements and degree of implementation at the local, state and federal level. Tracking should be standardized based on national recommendations with local systems remaining flexible for just-in-time requirements.


2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 177-183
Author(s):  
Christopher Freese ◽  
Neil Forster ◽  
Brittany Prater ◽  
Meredith Amlung ◽  
Michael Lamba ◽  
...  

2011 ◽  
Vol 41 (4) ◽  
pp. 360-369 ◽  
Author(s):  
Priyadarshini R. Pennathur ◽  
Dapeng Cao ◽  
Ann M. Bisantz ◽  
Li Lin ◽  
Rollin J. Fairbanks ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-9
Author(s):  
Andra M. Farcas ◽  
Hashim Q. Zaidi ◽  
Nicholas P. Wleklinski ◽  
Katie L. Tataris

Author(s):  
Gianluca Cornetta ◽  
David J. Santos

This work describes the work-in-progress aimed at the design of a telemedicine system that is intended to give support to the physicians in critical scenarios and keep a record of the patient status within all the evacuation chain. The authors call this system a Patient Tracking System (PTS). The hardware/software platform described will integrate the services and functionalities available from the existing e-health infrastructure and provide the physicians with a decision support system in remote and hard-to-reach areas. The main goal is building a simple network hierarchy relying on two kinds of mobile devices: 1) a low-power Medical Information Carrier (MIC), and 2) an MDA (Medical Digital Assistant). A MIC is a device intended to hold personal medical information that may be accessed by a physician through a specialized terminal (the MDA) and, when suitably programmed, may emit a beacon signal to allow patient tracking along the evacuation chain. It is anticipated that our design will contribute to improve the efficiency in the use of communication resources in telemedicine. In a more general way, this project should enhance our understanding of the limitations that hardware and software impose on the operation in critical scenarios.


Author(s):  
Chieh-Ling Huang ◽  
Shu-Ling Hsiao ◽  
Yu-Chia Hsu ◽  
Pau-Choo Chung ◽  
Ming-Hua Tsai ◽  
...  

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