Infonaut News

Archive for August, 2009

Featured Partner: Dapasoft

Saturday, August 15th, 2009

Dapasoft, an award winning Canadian software company that is a leader in hospital & healthcare system integration, is a trusted partner of Infonaut’s who skill and expertise are proving key to our growth and success.

Of particular interest is Dapasoft’s “Corolar” solution, which simplifies the design, development and management of HL7 integration solutions. Corolar is completely optimized for HL7 integration projects, and is the product of years of experience and a deep understanding of the integration environment. In doing so, it addresses a number of key themes and requirements for all integration projects. Corolar is now natively bundled with Infonaut’s Region Watch Live and Hospital Watch Live solutions.

Corolar is a standard-based solution that uses best practices, it automatically generates full documentation on the HL7 integration requirements and overall, it dramatically accelerates delivery of HL7 integration solutions at a reduced cost. But perhaps the most interesting feature is that it ‘packages’ the connections between various systems and allows these to be shared and re-used within the ‘Corolar’ community – dramatically reducing the time and effort to create each individual connection. For a coordinating and planning body that oversees a number of hospitals and healthcare providers it simplifies regional integration efforts.

Dapasoft has developed and nurtured a close relationship with Microsoft, the world’s leading software development business. As a Microsoft Gold Certified Partner, they have demonstrated a comprehensive understanding of Microsoft-based software and E-Business solutions. Our clients can trust that their Microsoft software or E-Business solutions will be integrated, replicable, scalable and reliable.

Words of the Month

Saturday, August 1st, 2009

de-identification: In patient privacy, de-identification refers to the removal of identifying information – patient name, medical record number, birthdate, social security number – from medical records, to protect patient privacy. This is important for HIPAA and patient privacy considerations.

re-anonymization: The ability to reverse-engineer anonymized information. E.g. The risk-exposure of being able to identify a person with 90% certainty, using only access to publicly available databases and the person’s date-of-birth and postal code.

Read more about locational privacy at http://www.ehealthinformation.ca.



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