companies & products news research white papers webinars videos project help
 
 
 
Premium Reports
Event Calendar
Slide shows

Reach thousands of potential customers through KioskMarketplace and its sister sites.

Click to find out how.

 

 

 

 
>Patient Self-Service

    

Kiosks check in at medical facilities

Sarah Berkshire contributor
• 27 May 2008

The infiltration of kiosks in the medical industry has produced time and monetary savings for the hospitals using the automated devices.

At some of Adventist Health Systems’ 37 facilities, the approximately four million patients that come through its doors each year have access to a self-service device. The kiosks automate tasks such as online scheduling, bill payment and registration. A technology called eSignature, part of the kiosk, allows Adventist to authenticate and store documents that require a signature, making the workflow paperless.

These benefits and more are causing hospitals, in growing numbers, to adopt the kiosks.
 
story continues below... advertisement
 

 
This story and all of our great free content is supported by:  
Corporate Safe Specialists   Corporate Safe Specialists | Safes | Cash Management 
Take your kiosk to the next level...accept customers' cash and track its flow to the bank.  Enhance your customers' experience while securing your cash.
 

"This is something that the health care industry has been waiting for a long time," said Sandy Nix, CEO of D2 Sales, maker of specialized kiosks and digital signage.

Her company has been setting up kiosks at two or three organizations each week. Some of those organizations are looking for up to 300 kiosks.

"We see the growth of this to continue to scale for the next three to five years," she said. "The market for this is exponential."

At Adventist Health Systems, which uses NCR Corp.’s MediKiosk, four facilities have 16 kiosks dedicated to self-check-in, said Bill Tyler, director of patient access and health information management applications at the Florida-based organization. Three more facilities are coming online soon. The other 19 facilities he is responsible for will be using the kiosks within a year.

"We’re pretty much expecting 100 percent adoption in the registration portion," he said of Adventist facilities.

At their facilities with kiosks, every patient signs a three-page document that is required but patients don’t need or want a copy of it. Scanning the pages was the sole responsibility of a full-time employee,

"There really is a tremendous savings," Tyler said, noting saved printing, personnel and storage costs.

Patients are ready and willing to use a kiosk, Tyler said, noting its ability to shorten lines and free up registration staff so they can focus on patients with special concerns. Traditionally, 95 percent of the time a patient spent at the registration desk was dedicated to answering a clerk’s routine questions.

NCR touts a 50 percent cut in check-in time for new patients as a 75 percent cut for existing patients through its solutions.

Adventist customers were quick to use Web applications that allow them to take care of medical business at home, Tyler said, further illustrating customer demand.

"Without us even promoting it, they were on our Web sites, fining it, using it," Tyler said.

Self-service provides a good return on investment for the organization, he said, but it’s also something patients expect. It compliments medical advances, adding to an organization’s reputation for offering the latest in medical care and giving the organization another way to differentiate itself from the competition.

NCR touts a 50 percent cut in check-in time for new patients as a 75 percent cut for existing patients through its solutions.
Self-service in the health care industry became a market for D2 Sales two years ago, and the company launched its My Patient Passport Express in February.

The kiosk was developed specifically for the health care industry and offers a wide range of peripherals and configurations that can be used to meet a particular facility’s unique needs.

For example, some hospitals need a monitor overlay to protect patient privacy and, perhaps, use a second screen above the filtered one for marketing. Some need WiFi. Others need a function that can identify the patient by reading a magnetic card or a fingerprint. The kiosk can also offer printers that use letter paper while others employ only paper for a standard receipt.

Health care providers take hundreds of millions of appointments per year, Nix said. Most of D2 Sales’ clients think 25 to 30 percent of their patients will check in at a kiosk, she said, and D2 Sales’ research shows that to be a conservative figure.

While medical advances and new technology have improved much of the actual care patients receive, the check-in process had evolved little if at all, said Chakri Toleti, NCR’s vice president of industry marketing for healthcare and the public sector.

"It’s a very manual process even today in the majority of the hospitals. It hasn’t changed in 20, 30 years," said Toleti.

Self-service applications automate the process, making it less laborious and less error-prone, he said.

Kiosks also improve service by communicating in five or six different languages and eliminating costly duplicate records, Toleti said.

Now, kiosks are predominantly used in hospitals, placed in a few hundreds of America’s 6,000 hospitals, Toleti said. There is significant interest in large and small facilities, he added.

There seems to be no limit on how deep self-service will penetrate the healthcare industry.

This is the beginning, Nix said, noting the self service trend now seen in hospitals and clinics could be picked up in other areas of the larger healthcare field such as dental and veterinary.

At some point, its possible hospital systems will communicate with insurance companies so that, for example, a patient standing at a hospital kiosk will see what portion of their bill is covered by their insurance company, Tyler said.




Related articles on this topic: Patient Self-Service

Optometry group installs free vision-screening kiosks in supermarkets
Asteres receives three patents for prescription-delivery kiosks
EyeSite vision-screening kiosk firm receives NIH grant to expand
Portable touchscreen kiosk provides quick healthcare check-up
Self-service apps for patients cut paper use, speed check-in at Tenet Healthcare

 

© 2010 NetWorld Alliance LLC. All rights reserved.

MOST POPULAR
  • Special summit will again offer secure, open forum for deployers
  • Video game- and DVD-rental/game buy-back kiosk company e-Play suspends operations
  • Focus on Escalate Retail's new Pocket Kiosk
  • Movie Gallery cites 'cannibalization' by redbox kiosks in bankruptcy filing
  • Truck stop technology
  • Bill in Congress would mandate blind-accessible interfaces on all kiosks
  • NCR, Blockbuster continuing westward expansion
  • Iowa library builds own self-checkout kiosk, saves tens of thousands of dollars
  • Bike-share kiosk effort pedals forward in Minneapolis
  • NCR, Diebold fare better than expected, despite financial drops

  • NEWS HEADLINES
    Bill Pay: Texas students use kiosk to pay utility bills
    Patient Self-Service: Optometry group installs free vision-screening kiosks in supermarkets
    Supermarkets & Grocery: Big Y Foods implements NCR deli-ordering kiosks
    Retail - Specialty: Kiosks part of Richmond OTB saloon
    DVD Rental Kiosk: Blockbuster may soon file for bankruptcy: Report
    Europe: Barcelona, Madrid airports implement kiosks with biometrics
    New report explores the ROI of self-service in restaurants
    More News Headlines

    FEATURE STORIES
    More Feature Stories

    WHITE PAPERS
    More White Papers

    FEATURED PRODUCTS
    More Featured Products

    VIDEO GALLERY
    More Videos

    PHOTO GALLERIES
    More Photo Galleries

    ALSO ON NETWORLD ALLIANCE
     
       
     
       
     
    © 2010 NetWorld Alliance

    Get the latest kiosk news delivered to
    your in-box.
    Click here to sign up for free.