By Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Greg House, USS
Frank Cable Public Affairs
POLARIS POINT, Guam (NNS) -- The submarine tender USS Frank
Cable (AS 40) upgraded its medical department's patient care medical records
system from a local-only paper medical record system to the Theater Medical
Information Program (TMIP) system, March 11.
TMIP allows Frank Cable's medical department to communicate
their crew member's medical encounters to the DOD's electronic medical record
system called AHLTA, the current electronic medical record storage system that
communicates with all military treatment facilities worldwide and is an
information source for the Veteran Administration's medical system.
This is a first in that Guam operational platforms can now
share medical encounters with Naval Hospital Guam and all other military
medical facilities, thus providing better care for all military members.
"The software tracks patient encounters more
efficiently than other systems. This system makes it possible to track your
progress fleet-wide," said Hospital Corpsman 3rd Class Sharron Tate, Frank
Cable's petty officer in charge of training for the TMIP system.
Using TMIP can also act as a safeguard if something happens
to a patient's medical record.
"Even if your paper medical record is lost, this system
will retain the data about all previous visits," said Tate. "This
will streamline medical treatment and make treatment information more
accessible to other military providers."
Patients are not the only ones reaping the benefits of
having this program installed on Frank Cable.
"Our staff will greatly benefit from utilizing the TMIP
program by allowing us to use the same program that other military hospitals
and operational units are currently using," said Tate. "We all can
communicate on the same system allowing for maximum treatment services for all
of our armed forces."
Frank Cable also recently established a link into AHLTA as
an actual clinic, with assistance from Naval Hospital Guam. This capability is
used while in port. The next planned phase of bringing the electronic medical
record systems to the waterfront, now that Frank Cable was able to demonstrate
operational success, will be to establish both AHLTA and TMIP clinics for all
associated platforms with medical assets.
Frank Cable, forward-deployed to the island of Guam,
conducts maintenance and support of submarines and surface vessels deployed in
the U.S. 7th Fleet area of responsibility.
No comments:
Post a Comment