Home Care News

Q & A with Hoda Sayed-Friel and Brian Doyle

What does the full merger of PtCT into MEDITECH mean to our customers? We sat down with two key players—Vice President of Marketing Hoda Sayed-Friel and Director of Home Care Sales Brian Doyle—to dig deeper into the future of our home care products and to learn more about "Care Without Walls." 


1) What does this merger mean for our current Home Care customers?

BRIAN: The merger benefits our customers in the many ways that Larry Polimeno detailed in his
letter. The financial resources and time-tested infrastructure and methodologies of MEDITECH will continue to lead to improvements across Service, Implementation, and Development. More importantly, our customers are now fully joined with MEDITECH's global vision of health care.

HODA: Customers should be excited about the new Home Care web portal on www.meditech.com, which will replace both www.ptct.com and The Conductor e-newsletter. One of my biggest goals is to improve communication channels with our existing customers, and get updated information into their hands in a more real-time manner. I want customers to know and understand how important we feel Home Care will become in the years ahead. Please don't hesitate to give us your
Feedback as to how we can best serve your communication needs.


2) How about current MEDITECH customers? What do our Home Care applications—and the company's "Care Without Walls" initiative—mean for them?

HODA: Fully merging Home Care products into our company is a natural extension of our mission. We want all of our customers—both current and future—to move beyond viewing Home Care, Hospice, and Telehealth as "other things" to consider. I believe that, in the very near-term, health care decision makers will begin to automatically include these areas in their approach to information systems, just as naturally as they would include the Laboratory and Pharmacy departments. 

We call this concept "Care Without Walls." MEDITECH systems are designed for you to share information among medical practices, clinics, Emergency Departments, nursing floors, rehab facilities, patient homes, and pharmacies. Our customers are uniquely positioned for community-based care and population health management. 


3) What tangible benefits has MEDITECH brought to the table since April 2007 (when the company first announced a majority ownership stake in PtCT)?

BRIAN: You can't overstate the impact MEDITECH has had in stabilizing all aspects of our operations. First and foremost, we returned to profitability, which is the key to overall success in any business. MEDITECH's deliberate and methodical practices have helped us to realign our vision of home care software. I could list several specific achievements which have occurred across Service, Implementation, and Development over the past 30 months, but I think the clearest evidence of all of the improvements is the fact that in April 2007, we did not have a customer LIVE with "Maestro" (now MEDITECH's Home Health and Hospice applications) and today we have 25 customers LIVE.

4) Let's get into some details. Can you tell us about the new organizational structure?

HODA: John Youngblood will remain in charge of Service for our Home Care applications, and will report to Janice Burns, MEDITECH Director of Service. Janice has been with us for 23 years, and is currently responsible for the Administrative, Billing/AR, and Clinical Continuing Care applications which serve our Long Term Care and Behavioral Health customers (as well as the General Financials for all customers). Beth Hellriegel will remain in charge of Implementation for our Home Care applications, and will report to Cathy Turner, MEDITECH Director of Implementation. Cathy has been with us for 18 years, and is currently responsible for our Nursing, Order Entry, and EMR products. Many of you likely know Cathy from her work as director of our Nurse Informatics Program and leader of our
Nurse Web Portal.

Daily operations will be consistent for our customers. The on-line customer service system will function in the same way, and for the early part of 2010, customers will be able to access it in the same manner they are familiar with—they'll automatically be re-routed to www.meditech.com without any extra steps. Eventually, our customer service system for Home Care will be re-tooled to function in the same manner as the MEDITECH system for other products.

BRIAN: Steve Miller will remain in a leadership role as part of MEDITECH's Development team, reporting to Robert Gale, Senior Vice President of Product Development. I'll continue reporting to Stu Lefthes, Vice President of Sales for MEDITECH, and I will continue to work closely with Hoda to expand our market.


5) And former "PtCT" staff will still continue to work out of Atlanta?

BRIAN: Yes. We're pretty excited about the fact that our Atlanta facility will be "MEDITECH-ized" in the year ahead—exteriors, interiors, networks, infrastructure, etc.

HODA: This building and infrastructure work will be done by our same wonderful staff who worked on our award-winning Massachusetts buildings in recent years. The facility will be known internally as "MEDITECH Atlanta" in the same manner we currently refer to "MEDITECH Canton" and so forth.


6) MEDITECH has always been known for integration. How does Home Care integrate with the acute care HCIS?

HODA: Currently, our HCIS is receiving vital signs, visit notes, care plan notes, 485s, and financial transactions from our home care applications. The new version also shares allergy and medication information, which lays the foundation for true medication reconciliation, which I am very excited about.

BRIAN: Likewise, we are sharing demographic information and referral information collected in the acute care setting with our Home Care applications. Lastly, and probably most importantly, our system shares medication and allergy information across the continuum, which as we all know is an area of great emphasis in today's delivery of care.


7) Is there any connection between Meaningful Use and Home Care?

HODA: While the Meaningful Use Criteria for 2011, 2013, and 2015 are of course still being finalized by HHS, it is apparent there will be several ways that our Home Care products will offer benefits in demonstrating these requirements. The biggest specific area is probably "reconciling medications at each care stage," which I described above. In addition, the 2013 requirements specifically reference "patients have access to self-management tools," an "implemented ability to incorporate data uploaded from home monitoring devices," and "access to comprehensive patient data from all available sources."

BRIAN: I also believe our Telehealth offering will play a key role in satisfying requirements for "engaging patient and families."


8) What's in store for the future?

HODA: Big things! As I mentioned, a huge part of the future for all of MEDITECH is "Care Without Walls." We are uniquely positioned to offer a proven, integrated solution that truly extends care across the continuum. People who have heard me give speeches and presentations know that I am passionate about using technology to facilitate chronic disease management. So many of the "Top 20" chronic conditions, which represent 80% of today's health care dollars, are well-suited to being treated and monitored in the home—diabetes, CHF, etc. The MEDITECH HCIS already collects and shares more information about chronic diseases than any other system. But down the road, MEDITECH is positioned to go even further, to use technology as part of a groundbreaking new model where we are actually facilitating the coordination of care for the prevention and treatment of chronic diseases. That's where I see us heading.

BRIAN: As we've detailed throughout this interview, it's easy to see the critical role home care will play in the future not only of Health Care Information Systems, but care delivery itself. I'm excited about the potential for an HCIS which also incorporates Home Health, Hospice, and Telehealth applications. I believe my current and future customers will be drawn to our offerings not only for the clinical benefits, but for the strong business case I can make for our integrated solution. And this business case extends to Home Care itself, as an industry. As our population continues to age, I believe the role of home care will grow in popularity among consumers (patients), and the combination of greater demand and lower cost will propel home care to the forefront of our health care system.