Friday, February 20, 2004
Duke, IBM Launch Healthcare Partnership
By Mike Upchurch
In a groundbreaking collaboration, Duke University and IBM will
team up to link genetic research data with patients’ clinical
records electronically. The project could make the process of finding
and enrolling suitable patients for clinical trials faster and easier.
Duke and many other hospitals and clinics now have difficulties
communicating between computing networks of medical specialties,
said Asif Ahmad, vice president and CIO for Duke University Health
System. Research facilities may have computing systems that are
installed and serviced by different providers than the rest of the
hospital system.
In addition to the research benefits, having genetic research data
integrated with patient records can also help physicians customize
a patient’s care more closely to his or her needs and avoid
mistakes.
The new system, called “Duke on Demand,” will integrate
the various computing systems used by Duke Health System clinics
and the clinical research programs at Duke University Medical Center
with genetic research data provided by Duke investigators. Using
IBM’s “on demand” networking services, the new
system can then be tailored to fit the size and needs of a particular
clinic or researcher.
The partnership is part of IBM’s new $250 million campaign
to expand its healthcare division. A similar collaboration with
the H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center at the University of South Florida
is also in the works. IBM says that the University of North Carolina
health system may soon sign a deal as well.
"The healthcare industry is under tremendous pressure to address
patient safety, quality of care and cost issues," said Caroline
Kovac, general manager of IBM Healthcare and Life Sciences
IBM is hiring new specialists in healthcare computing to work on
the projects, and is also expanding its healthcare-dedicated infrastructure.
These new specialists will serve as consultants on the Duke on Demand
program, and data will be stored on IBM servers.
According to Ahmad, Duke physicians must now “sift through
many systems” in order to find the patient data that will
tell them if that patient is a good candidate for their research.
Duke on Demand will bring genetic research data together with patients’
records to help match candidates with appropriate trials.
The initial focus will be on heart disease and breast cancer research.
Consolidating worldwide genetic data could greatly speed research
efforts in these diseases, which are thought to have substantial
hereditary components.
The initial phase of the project, set to be complete in June, will
involve 15-20 employees each from IBM and Duke. |