Website Maintenance Announcement – September 19–21
Activities begin at 6:00 PM CT on Friday, September 19 and continue through Sunday, September 21.
During this time, Product and My Product List functionality will be unavailable
Website Maintenance Announcement – September 19–21
Activities begin at 6:00 PM CT on Friday, September 19 and continue through Sunday, September 21.
During this time, Product and My Product List functionality will be unavailable
Dutch healthcare professionals spend a quarter of their time on administrative tasks, according to Berenschot agency in June 2017. Most of their time is wasted on creating and maintaining client files. All details about accommodation, supervision, personal care, nursing, and treatment must be carefully kept in records, which, according to nine in ten healthcare professionals, comes at the expense of the direct care for residents and clients. Therefore, for healthcare institutions, there is an incentive to work with reliable solutions that are immediately available, wherever and whenever.
The Frankelandgroep, consisting of a homecare division and five locations for long-term care of the elderly in the Schiedam / Vlaardingen region in the Netherlands, has decided to reduce the impact of working with the files by switching from paper to Elektronische Cliënten Dossiers (ECDs or Electronic Client Files). This makes management easier and ensures that every file can be quickly available anywhere in the organization. An important condition is that the reliability and accessibility of the electronic solution is at least equal to that of the paper version. This places high demands on the wireless network used for this solution.
The Frankelandgroep uses PlanCare, an ECD solution from De Heer Software. The most important requirement of the Frankelandgroep was that this ECD of all 800 residents should always be accessible anywhere within the five locations, in a safe and reliable way, without outages or delays, irrespective of the utilization of the network. “Until then, we only had Wi-Fi in the Auditorium,” said Adrie Kagchelland, ICT Coordinator at the Frankelandgroep, “and this immediately became overloaded as soon as the room filled up.”