MedBoard is the first wireless, web-based medication tracking system for hospitals.
Medication Tracking is a largely unmet need in the hospital pharmacy. Hospital pharmacists receive calls all day long from nurses asking where the medication they ordered is, and when it can be expected to be delivered.
MedBoard is a web-based Medication Tracking System that records and tracks preparation and delivery activities so you know when the medications left the pharmacy and where they were delivered.
- Monitor deliveries and minimize look-ups.
- Know when the medications left the pharmacy and where they were delivered.
- Identify the last person to handle a medication and reduce
diversion.
- Enhance productivity and identify undelivered orders.
- Enhance communication by allowing nurses to view order status
- Increase workflow efficiency by queuing and prioritizing orders
- Track time sensitive orders
- Reduce expired and lost inventory costs
- Reduce waste and re-work of orders
- Demonstrate pharmacy preparation and delivery performance.
- Justify staffing levels
- Quantify pharmacy performance
- Develop superior auditability
- Record deliveries via wireless and tethered barcode scanners (linear and 2D)
- Display real-time status of medications via secure website
- View information using only a web browser
- Customize views for pharmacists, nurses, technicians and other providers
- Develop robust reports to demonstrate delivery performance
- Seamlessly integrates with hospital IT systems
- Integrates with pharmacy, ADT, ADC, carousel and tube systems
- Incorporates customizable checkpoints and rules
- HIPAA compliant
RELATED INFORMATION:
- Medication Tracking System Improves Drug Delivery Times for Riverside Methodist Hospital
- 11/09 Free Webinar: "Closing the Black Hole of Pharmacy with
Medication Tracking"
View on-demand webinar and download the slides.
TESTIMONIAL:
"I call MedBoard the 'FedEx of the pharmacy world' because it tracks the
medications that nurses are waiting for. Now we know who is delivering
what to where within seconds. It allows nurses to spend more time at the
bedside because they aren't hunting for medications."
Charles McCluskey, Pharm.D., Director of Pharmacy & Pulmonary
Services, Riverside Methodist Hospital
