u/4rcher_4rg

¿Trabajas en IT de Salud o en un Hospital?

Hola a todos. Soy estudiante de ing. en sistemas y estoy haciendo mi tesis sobre la infraestructura tecnológica en el sector salud.

Me ayudarían mucho respondiendo estas dudas (o las que puedan):

Hardware: ¿Qué tan viejas son las computadoras del día a día?

Sistemas: ¿El sistema de gestión (HIS) corre en el navegador o es una aplicación instalada (tipo Java o ejecutable)?

Papel vs. Digital: ¿Enfermería ya tiene terminales en todos lados o el papel sigue siendo el rey para las notas?

Puntos críticos: ¿Hay algún software específico que siempre se "muera" o ralentice todo?

Plan de Contingencia: Si el sistema se cae... ¿qué pasa? ¿Tienen protocolos claros en papel o el hospital entra en pánico?

Seguridad: ¿Los puertos USB están bloqueados o es "tierra de nadie"?

Integración: ¿La ficha del paciente es única para todo el hospital o Rayos, Laboratorio y Guardia usan sistemas que no se hablan entre sí?

reddit.com
u/4rcher_4rg — 7 hours ago

Do you work in Healthcare IT or a Hospital?

Hi everyone,

I’m a Ing. sistem student currently working on my thesis regarding IT infrastructure in the healthcare sector.

Any insights on the following would be a huge help:

  • Hardware: How old are the daily-use workstations? (Are we talking modern builds or legacy machines still clinging to Windows 7/XP?).
  • HIS/Systems: Does your Hospital Information System run in the browser (SaaS/Web-based) or is it a locally installed "thick client" (Java, .exe, etc.)?
  • Paper vs. Digital: Do nurses have terminals/COWs (Computer on Wheels) everywhere, or is paper still the king for daily charting?
  • Pain Points: Is there a specific piece of software that "always breaks" or slows everything down?
  • Contingency Plans: What happens when the system goes down? Are there clear paper protocols in place, or does the facility go into panic mode?
  • Security: Are USB ports strictly blocked, or is it still a "wild west" where anyone can plug anything in?
  • Integration: Is there a single Unified Patient Record, or do departments (Lab, Radiology, ER) use separate systems that don't talk to each other?
reddit.com
u/4rcher_4rg — 7 hours ago

Do you work in Healthcare IT or a Hospital?

Hi everyone,

I’m a Ing. sistem student currently working on my thesis regarding IT infrastructure in the healthcare sector.

Any insights on the following would be a huge help:

  • Hardware: How old are the daily-use workstations? (Are we talking modern builds or legacy machines still clinging to Windows 7/XP?).
  • HIS/Systems: Does your Hospital Information System run in the browser (SaaS/Web-based) or is it a locally installed "thick client" (Java, .exe, etc.)?
  • Paper vs. Digital: Do nurses have terminals/COWs (Computer on Wheels) everywhere, or is paper still the king for daily charting?
  • Pain Points: Is there a specific piece of software that "always breaks" or slows everything down?
  • Contingency Plans: What happens when the system goes down? Are there clear paper protocols in place, or does the facility go into panic mode?
  • Security: Are USB ports strictly blocked, or is it still a "wild west" where anyone can plug anything in?
  • Integration: Is there a single Unified Patient Record, or do departments (Lab, Radiology, ER) use separate systems that don't talk to each other?
reddit.com
u/4rcher_4rg — 7 hours ago

Do you work in Healthcare IT or a Hospital?

Hi everyone,

I’m a Ing. sistem student currently working on my thesis regarding IT infrastructure in the healthcare sector.

Any insights on the following would be a huge help:

  • Hardware: How old are the daily-use workstations? (Are we talking modern builds or legacy machines still clinging to Windows 7/XP?).
  • HIS/Systems: Does your Hospital Information System run in the browser (SaaS/Web-based) or is it a locally installed "thick client" (Java, .exe, etc.)?
  • Paper vs. Digital: Do nurses have terminals/COWs (Computer on Wheels) everywhere, or is paper still the king for daily charting?
  • Pain Points: Is there a specific piece of software that "always breaks" or slows everything down?
  • Contingency Plans: What happens when the system goes down? Are there clear paper protocols in place, or does the facility go into panic mode?
  • Security: Are USB ports strictly blocked, or is it still a "wild west" where anyone can plug anything in?
  • Integration: Is there a single Unified Patient Record, or do departments (Lab, Radiology, ER) use separate systems that don't talk to each other?
reddit.com
u/4rcher_4rg — 7 hours ago