Making a Difference: North Sunflower Medical Center

Walt Grayson has another story about people who are making a difference for other people, this time from the Delta town of Ruleville. We start at North Sunflower Medical Center, a hospital that has come back from the brink of extinction, and is bringing the whole community back with it. It is a thriving critical care facility today, with an emergency room and a nursing home and a wellness center and a clinic that sees over 5000 people a month. And yet just six years ago, this facility was only moments away from closing. That's the condition it was in when Billy Marlow was promoted from a member of the board of directors, to Chairman of the Board, to acting administrator, all in short order. Billy Marlow, the Executive Dir. of NSMC, Ruleville says, "We had about eight hours of cash on hand with a lot of debt and no patients." Through a lot of effort, determination, and primarily not knowing they couldn't do this, they saved the hospital and more. Joanie Perkins, Chief Development Officer, NSMC tells part of what they have done. "We rank number one in patient satisfaction in the state of Mississippi and in the top 10 in the nation, of all hospitals, not just critical access. We are the cleanest facility and we have the nicest employees." That "cleanest" designation is by actual statistics, and the "nicest employees" is a matter of opinion, but stands to reason if you have all of the other accolades. But it was a mess when Billy Marlow took it over. Billy says, "I did a survey the first thing I did was, ‘Tell me what's wrong. Tell me how to fix it.' And really the employees fixed this." Well, the fixing didn't stop there. As much as the hospital has improved, so has the town of Ruleville, because the hospital has invested in the city. Robin Marlow, NSMC Dir. of Community Relations says, "The North Sunflower has obtained several buildings downtown to create different businesses. We have Sunflower Dental Clinic, Sunflower Eye Station, The Diagnostic Center, which is digital mammograms." And a bunch more. To the extent that this little hospital by all rights should have ceased to exist years ago. And if it had, what was left of the community would have followed. But it didn't because of the employees, yes, but also because of Billy Marlow who thought they'd fix it rather than let it go. And in so doing, has made a difference for the thousands of patients who are treated here every year, for the 500 plus employees who work here, and the town of Ruleville, all defying the odds and not only surviving, but thriving. Article courtesy of MSNewsNow

North Sunflower Medical Center to deploy McKesson health IT solutions

As part of its mission to become the first critical access hospital in Mississippi to demonstrate meaningful use of electronic health record (EHR) technology, North Sunflower Medical Center plans to deploy a suite of McKesson information technology solutions. The new systems will replace paper-based records and disparate technologies and address duplicate data entry challenges with communications capabilities designed to automate outdated manual processes and better coordinate care. “These two systems offer a winning combination for North Sunflower Medical Center and community healthcare providers across the country” The deployment includes McKesson's Paragon® health information system (HIS) , Practice Partner® EHR solution and RelayHealth claims and eligibility processing solutions, as well as workforce management to enable efficient staff scheduling. The rural medical center, which serves the Mississippi Delta region, expects to use this technology to dramatically simplify clinical and business operations while improving preventative care and patient safety. With the new systems, North Sunflower's 20 physicians, 24 mid-level practitioners, and authorized medical billing and support staff will have secure, "anywhere, anytime" access to complete patient records at their fingertips. Exam room notes in physician practices will update the patient's chart automatically. Patients will be able to view their electronic health record, request prescription refills, pre-register, track treatments and communicate with their physicians via a secure Internet connection. The technology is also intended to streamline workflows for North Sunflower's medical teams and provide seamless integration across the medical center. McKesson's information technology (IT) will play an important role at North Sunflower's 25-bed hospital and community clinic, where practitioners treat a combined 2,600 patients per month, as well as its new 30,000 square foot wellness center. Doctors and nutritionists at the new facility will emphasize proactive and preventative care for the chronically ill. "This strategic initiative with McKesson enables us to embark on a whole new level of big-hospital healthcare in one of the most economically challenged communities in the country," said Joanie Perkins, director of network development for North Sunflower Medical Center. "Our new systems are designed to provide a safety net under every nurse, physician, pharmacist and patient, with unprecedented information access and sharing capabilities that will support high-quality, safe healthcare." The technology will allow clinicians to more easily share the collective results from diabetes and cardiovascular patient studies and reports with people who live in communities throughout Sunflower County. The medical center believes that patients will be more engaged in improving their own health once they see statistics that show the impact exercise and healthy diets can have on their lives. "We're taking advantage of a once-in-a-lifetime stimulus opportunity to invest in our future and the future of our community with the best healthcare IT solutions available today," Perkins said. "We are determined to remain a healthcare leader in Mississippi and, with McKesson's IT expertise, we believe we can set the standard for quality of care." "These two systems offer a winning combination for North Sunflower Medical Center and community healthcare providers across the country," said Jim Pesce, president, Paragon, McKesson Provider Technologies. "Anywhere, anytime access to electronic health records and comprehensive chronic care data opens up a new world of healthcare productivity and connectivity, as well as life-changing care for the people of Sunflower County." Article courtesy of NewsMedical.Net