tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3741684961227307530.post8185280158293631150..comments2024-01-05T05:58:19.437-08:00Comments on Medical Quack: Alarm Fatigue and Health IT interoperability Are Top 10 Challenges Today With Medical Engineering And Pushing Some to Technology and Occupational Burn OutMedical Quackhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12443589277651479846noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3741684961227307530.post-82090577002223883962011-09-01T01:43:19.920-07:002011-09-01T01:43:19.920-07:00great information, thanks for sharegreat information, thanks for shareMedical Alert Systemhttp://www.medicalalertsystemblog.com/noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3741684961227307530.post-9167530506323684002011-07-07T10:04:09.788-07:002011-07-07T10:04:09.788-07:00As a vendor of policy management
software for hos...As a vendor of <a href="http://www.policymedical.com" rel="nofollow">policy management <br />software</a> for hospitals, we experience the burnout from our clients on a <br />regular basis. As the workload of CIOs pile on, and their work hours <br />stretch thin, they barely have any time or mental energy to keep track of their <br />existing projects, much less take on new ones. We see this during inflection <br />points when we release a new software update or schedule a regular training <br />session. Every new task, no matter how small, is a source of frustration because <br />they're already at the brink. The only thing we can do to alleviate the pain by <br />making our software as simple as possible, both from a back-end perspective and <br />a user interface perspective. We also work to make our software as intuitive as <br />possible, minimizing the training and/or maintenance needed.PolicyMedicalhttp://www.policymedical.comnoreply@blogger.com