UK Cancer Network Implements Varian's ARIA(TM) for Electronic Prescribing and Comprehensive Electronic Patient Records
January 12 2010 - 8:00AM
PR Newswire (US)
OXFORD, England, Jan. 12 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- A chemotherapy
software solution that enables patients to become more involved in
managing their own care has been successfully rolled out across a
network of hospitals in the UK. The Thames Valley Cancer Network
has implemented Aria for Medical Oncology(TM) from Varian Medical
Systems (NYSE:VAR) and already has more than 850 clinical staff
routinely using the system. The network, comprising cancer centers
in Oxford and Reading and district general hospitals in Wiltshire,
Berkshire and Buckinghamshire, has staggered the implementation
over the past year, with Buckingham Hospital going 'live' early in
2009 and the Great Western Hospital in Swindon recently becoming
the most recent site to roll out the program. "The ARIA system has
been extremely well received by clinical teams and patients alike,"
says Dr. Claire Blesing, consultant clinical oncologist at
Churchill Hospital in Oxford and clinical lead for the project. "A
big plus is that ARIA is not just a prescribing system, like the
previous method we had here in Oxford, it's a full medical record.
We were looking for something fresh and new to use in trusts that
had no great background in electronic chemotherapy prescribing and
ARIA gives us all the functionality we require." Dr. Blesing added,
"We needed something that could be accessed from all hospitals
across the Thames Valley Network without losing data between them.
This enables a patient to be prescribed initial chemotherapy in one
hospital in the network and then have follow-up treatment in
another." Varian's ARIA oncology information system provides all
the tools needed to manage the clinical, administrative, and
financial activities of a medical oncology department. The
oncology-specific electronic medical record (EMR) is the
centerpiece of the system, enabling a personalized care pathway to
be designed for each patient from initial diagnosis through
follow-up. The system manages chemotherapy, drug orders and all
other non-drug physician orders. "The system's toxicity evaluation
sheet records the side effects a patient has when taking
chemotherapy and we can record how well they are and how much they
weigh each time they come in for a consultation," said Dr. Blesing.
"This is all on the same patient record as you use to prescribe
chemotherapy. So when a patient is with me, I have it displayed on
the screen in front of me and the patient can also see it. We also
give the patient a record book to take home and they become much
more involved in managing their treatment." Susan Wright, 66, a
cancer patient at Great Western Hospital in Swindon, said, "Dr.
Blesing explained the system to me when I first began chemotherapy
treatment and I have constantly felt part of the process rather
than simply being told what to do. We go through my medical record
together and it enables me to become more involved in managing my
disease." Dr. Blesing has worked with colleagues at Trusts across
the network -- comprising Oxford Radcliffe Hospitals NHS Trust,
Milton Keynes General Foundation Trust, Buckingham Hospitals NHS
Trust, Royal Berkshire Foundation Trust (Reading), Heatherwood
& Wexham Foundation Trust and Great Western Hospital Foundation
Trust -- to ensure the ARIA implementation matched the robust
nature of the network's protocols. "This means all the steps in the
process from prescribing, to pharmacy checking, dispensing and drug
administration by nursing staff can now be signed off
electronically whereas previously the pharmacists used to have to
check a printed off version and then fax it to the pharmacy," said
Dr. Blesing. "The prescription was then prepared and sent back for
signing by the nursing staff and many changes were made by hand.
Now nothing needs printing and this reduces the possibility of
errors and gives us more time to pay attention to our patients."
Thames Valley Cancer Network has now offered to share its regimen
library and network-written user guides with all other UK ARIA for
Medical Oncology users to try to reduce duplication of work across
the country and speed up the process of ARIA implementation
elsewhere. Steve Laws, Varian's European software sales manager,
said, "We are honored that this pioneering cancer network felt that
ARIA met its needs for a fast, flexible, and paperless record
keeping system. We are looking forward to working closely with the
six trusts in this network to ensure the ARIA rollout brings as
many benefits as possible for clinical staff and patients."
Editorial contact: Neil Madle, Varian Medical Systems, +44 7786
526068 About Varian Medical Systems Varian Medical Systems, Inc.,
of Palo Alto, California, is the world's leading manufacturer of
medical devices and software for treating cancer and other medical
conditions with radiotherapy, radiosurgery, proton therapy, and
brachytherapy. The company supplies informatics software for
managing comprehensive cancer clinics, radiotherapy centers and
medical oncology practices. Varian is a premier supplier of tubes
and digital detectors for X-ray imaging in medical, scientific, and
industrial applications and also supplies X-ray imaging products
for cargo screening and industrial inspection. Varian Medical
Systems employs approximately 5,100 people who are located at
manufacturing sites in North America, China, and Europe and in its
79 sales and support offices around the world. For more
information, visit http://www.varian.com/ DATASOURCE: Varian
Medical Systems CONTACT: Neil Madle of Varian Medical Systems, +44
7786 526068 Web Site: http://www.varian.com/
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