Highlights
We are switching to electronic ordering in early 2024
- Electronic ordering (computerized provider order entry, or CPOE) and a closed-loop medication system are targeted to go live at Victoria General Hospital (VGH), Gorge Road Hospital and South Island Surgical Centre in mid-February 2024 and at Royal Jubilee Hospital (RJH) in mid-March 2024.
- Thirty-six ambulatory/outpatient clinics with significant linkages to patients in acute care will go live with VGH and RJH. Remaining ambulatory clinics will follow later.
- In preparation for electronic ordering, order sets are being updated to reflect:
- Best practices
- Opioid safety principles
- Island-wide standardization – with flexibility to support local site variance in service provision
CPOE is a major quality improvement change
- Moving from paper orders to electronic orders improves the quality and safety of patient care. This is a significant change to medical and clinical practice supported through early and frequent medical staff engagement, formal training and go-live support.
- Our learning and engagement strategy includes:
- Online and in-person formal training, workflow reviews and personalization events closer to go live.
- Dedicated engagement lab staffed by knowledgeable Provider Education and Experience (ProEX) educators to answer questions and demo aspects of computerized order entry.
- Medical Staff and Learners will be supported by Medical Staff Specialty and Site Leads, Peer Mentors, Clinical Informatics, and a 24/7 Go-Live support team (on-site and remote).
Visit RJH/VGH engagement labs and invite us to speak on CPOE at a team meeting
- Invite us to one of your team meetings to discuss CPOE and associated changes. We would be glad to answer questions, provide demonstrations, or receive feedback at any time.
- The engagement labs are available Wednesdays from 1 to 3 p.m. for onsite drop-in IHealth support and demonstrations:
RJH: Royal Block 203
VGH: S275
For any inquiries related to the engagement labs, please email EHRProviderEducation@IslandHealth.ca.
CPOE with Dr. de Wit
In this short video, Dr. Andre de Wit demonstrates placing electronic orders on admission.
IHealth FAQs
Q: What is the rationale for the sequential CPOE go-lives at VGH and RJH?
A: Island Health recognized that while VGH and RJH are tightly integrated and work within a single inpatient acute encounter, we needed to separate the go-lives by about four weeks. This acknowledges the significance of the change, the health human resource challenges and the change impact (i.e., reduction in some services during activation). This four-week period:
- provides the opportunity for sites to support each other in patient service delivery (e.g., load levelling between Emergency Departments (EDs) or Surgical Services in support (such as peer mentors);
- provides a better opportunity to have the appropriate number of supports (i.e., peer mentors, clinical and medical informatics);
- allows for unique, complex and new services (i.e., critical care, neurology, cath lab, etc.) to stabilize at each tertiary site.
Q: What is the rationale for the partial Ambulatory Clinic go-lives?
A: Ambulatory clinics often go live in “waves” of clinics. For example, the Lower Mainland has used this approach to their ambulatory roll out.
- Typically, clinics that are tightly integrated with inpatient services go along with inpatient care.
- Support requirements also impact how many clinics can go live within a certain time period.