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Future-ready Healthcare IT Platforms: Get to the Cloud
Andrew Litt, MD, Chief Medical Officer, Dell Healthcare and Life sciences
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Panelist
David Tomlinson CIO/CFO; Centegra
Bill Russell CIO;
St. Joseph Health
Ismelda GarzaIT Director; Comanche
County Medical Center
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Current Usage
Moving beyond the cloud hype
Enterprise cloud application revenues reached $22.9B in 2011 and are projected to reach$67.3B by 2016.
60% of server workloads will be virtualized by 2014.
Global cloud traffic will account for nearly two-thirds of total data center traffic by 2016.
Today 46% of business data stored outside of internal IT structures.
Over the past three years nearly 74% of data centers increased physical server count.
IaaS cloud management & security and PaaS are growing from $7.6B in 2011 to $35.5B in 2016.
24%
37%
39%
Private
Hybrid
Public
Projected Market Spend of
$241 Billion by 2020
Source: Dell Customer Research, April 2013
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Industry adoption varies
Gartner
Advanced Heavy Moderate Measured Lagging
Adopting
Private cloud PaaS and IaaS
Community cloud and service providers
Community cloud and SaaS
Email and collaboration
Panicky migration from vendor to provider
Not much happening
Public records, medical processes
Industry
Financial services
Telecommunications
Government
Education
High tech
Energy and utilities
Healthcare
Retail Brokerage and messaging integration
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Healthcare transformation in the cloud
Healthcare and Life Sciences
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Changing healthcare landscape2013Traditional IT still dominant41.8% of a healthcare organization's IT budget is allocated to traditional IT deployment
2015Cloud IT growth acceleratesWithin two years' time traditional IT budget will decrease to 35.4%. Use of public cloud services will increase from 12.6% to 15.8%
2017Cloud IT multi $B marketAlthough adoption is held back by regulatory initiatives and security concerns, the cloud market in healthcare is expected to grow to $5.4 billion by 2017
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Impediments to cloud adoption for healthcare providers
Concerns over security and availability
Have not yet developed a cloud roadmap
No end-to-end service management strategy
Unclear future and roadmap for cloud services
Have not yet created a service catalog for cloud services
Have concerns about cross-border rules
Have not identified what our exit plan for cloud would be
Concerns that cloud providers will not continue to innovate
40
28.4
20.5
17.4
14.1
11.8
11.3
7
Source: IDC's Global Technology and Industry Research Organization IT Survey, 2012
(% of respondents)
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Multiple regulatory requirements
Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (1996)
Security rules• 45 CFR 160• 45 CFR 162• 45 CFR 164
HIPA HITECH MEANINGFUL USE
American Recovery and Reinvestment Act – Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health (2009)
HIPAA Security Rule Plus• New civil money penalties for
violations• Covered entities and business
associates must comply• Breach notification obligation for
breaches on or after Sept. 2009
Meaningful Use (2010)
Risk Analysis• 45 CFR 164.308 (a)
(1)• Core Measure 15
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How can audits and penalties impact you
Breach Notification Rule
KPMG contract:Audits of 150 hospitals
Fines and penalties
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Challenges = cloud opportunity
Reduce costs
Improve quality of care
Operate under high regulations2
Effectively manage IT resources4
13
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• Manage specific environment on customer behalf
• Facilitate aggressive implementation schedules
• SLA easy to understand and implement (99.95% uptime)
• Free up hospital IT resources to focus on service delivery and application implementation
• Expect predictable outcomes with a choice of service levels for operational availability.
• Choose disaster recovery options that allow you to meet Recovery Point Objectives and Recovery Time Objectives
• Select add-on solution options to fulfill your specific requirements
• Reliable & secure ISB backup, recovery, and tape administration
• Highly secure and reliable network connectivity options offer HIPAA-compliant data encryption
• System monitoring
• Pre-defined server availability levels
• Standard data administration procedures and tools
Why Cloud?
Secure Flexible Simple
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Dell cloud strategy for healthcare
Hospitals Physicians Payers Life Science
Healthcare cloud platform
Establish an Interoperability Network connecting Healthcare ConstituentsDevelop a Next Generation delivery mechanism based on a secure Cloud Platform that support derivative data driven solutions Integrate Current and Future Solutions through the cloud to deploy at scale
Strategic Pillars
1
2
3Analytics Archiving & Storage
Reporting &
AlertingOther
Electronic Medical Records
Revenue Cycle
Services
Payers Solutions
Healthcare solutions
Data Management Security
Other
InteroperabilityMobility
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Dell Healthcare in the Cloud
diagnostic image objects managed by Dell in the cloud. Protecting medical images for 7% of US Population
6B+
Security events29B
50+customers supported with cloud-based HIS and DR
MEDITECH
Processed daily by Dell SecureWorks, a core component of the Dell Cloud
Integration processes
650,000+Per day with Dell Boomi,over 3Xs our nearest competitor
To market with the Dell OpenStack Solution
1stMore EMRs supported in a secure dedicated Healthcare Cloud than any other healthcare IT services provider
$200MDell achieved this by virtualizing 10,000 servers and reducing applications from 7,000 to less than 2,500
Dell’s Crowbar deployment, management and services
saved by Dell
400Kphysicians and 500 individual practices supported by Dell’s physician hosting cloud solution
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David Tomlinson, CIO/CFO
Centegra
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Bill Russell, CIO
St. Joseph Health,
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Ismelda Garza; IT Director
Comanche County Medical Center
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Q&A
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Let’s get started
Visit the Solution Showcase to see our end-to-end healthcare solutions and services Gain hands on experience, see demonstrations at the Solution Showcase
Schedule a visit to a Dell Solution Center near you: Austin • New York City • Washington D.C. Chicago • Santa Clara • Mexico City • Sao Paolo
Go to www.Dell.com/healthcare
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