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NoMachine Collaborates to Help Hospital Improve Patient Experience Adding Email and Web Access Bedside with Virtual Linux Desktops

2009-07-02  by: Katie Glossner

ARMONK, N.Y. July 1, 2009 – IBM, NoMachine and Novell announce today that Glendale Adventist Medical Center (GAMC) has improved the experience of its hospital patients by delivering email and Web access bedside, while saving significant information technology (IT) maintenance and energy costs. 

The hospital installed personal computing stations in 65 rooms of its West Tower, enabling patients to surf the Internet, communicate with friends and family through social media websites such as Facebook and Twitter, and research medical information about their condition. 

The hospital estimates that the energy efficient “thin client” computer monitors running “in a cloud” saves 60 percent in electricity costs versus stand-alone PCs.  Because the brain of the computer is centralized, not local, the hospital receives 96 percent fewer maintenance calls to hospital rooms versus the hospital's stand-alone PCs, and saves 98 percent on IT support.

Glendale Hospital patients have responded enthusiastically to their bedside desktops, and the hospital sees this service as a way to attend to the patient’s emotional needs and stand out from competitors.  Some patients use the computers to blog about their hospital stay or update CarePages or CaringBridge, popular patient Websites and blogs that connect patients with chronic illnesses to their friends and families.   

“Just as easily as Glendale provides patients with TVs at bedside, now we provide personal computing,” said Roger Pruyne, senior programmer/analyst and project manager for the GAMC Patient Computing project.  “The solution from NoMachine, Novell and IBM has delivered fantastic results for patients and the IT team.  Considering our patients' positive feedback, we're looking to expand the project to other Adventist Health hospital locations.”

GAMC says it also plans to extend its use of virtual desktops for employee and clinical use in the future.  For more than 100 years, GAMC in Glendale, California, has been on the leading edge of medical technology.  The hospital offers a wide range of advanced services, including many that are normally available only in major university-affiliated hospitals.

Using virtualized Linux desktops has kept the costs of the patient service low while maintaining a high level of privacy and security. Updates and maintenance to the software can be made on a centralized server by the hospital’s IT staff, while no data is left on the local client monitor after the patient checks out of the hospital room. SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop from Novell is the operating system that virtualizes the 65 desktops.  NoMachine, creator and global distributor of NX desktop and application delivery software, provides complete and efficient remote access.  An IBM System x3650 server provides the back-end computing system, and IBM experts also advised GAMC on the project's design.

“Glendale has found a healthy balance of new patient services and lower IT costs,” said Inna Kuznetsova, director of IBM Linux strategy. “With Web access to friends and family, Glendale's virtual Linux desktops are improving its patients' real hospital experience.”

The NoMachine NX system provides easy set-up and installation, reducing the need for software support and technical assistance, enabling a smooth deployment of the in-hospital remote desktop solution for patients.  NX's data encryption allows the secure transfer of confidential information and patient records. 

“An important feature of this project is NX's ability to enable a connection over any type of network, including low-bandwidth and dial-up,” said Sarah Dryell, business development manager for NoMachine.  “NX's unique compression and caching features also provide a seamless remote connection from the thin client to the server, giving the patients the feel of being on their own personal computer, while reducing power consumption and support costs.”

About Glendale Adventist Medical Center
Since 1905, Glendale Adventist Medical Center (GAMC) has been providing quality health care services to residents of Glendale and the surrounding communities.  GAMC is a full-service, not-for-profit medical center, providing state-of-the-art inpatient and outpatient services that meet the needs of the hospital's diverse community, including the area's growing Armenian, Latino and Korean populations.  Glendale Adventist Medical Center specializes in the following services; emergency, stroke/neuroscience, heart/vascular, spine injuries, joint replacement, cancer treatment, behavioral health, rehabilitation services and women's issues.

Glendale Adventist Medical Center is a part of Adventist Health, a not-for-profit, faith-based health system operating in California, Hawaii, Oregon and Washington.  Founded on the Seventh-day Adventist heritage of Christian health care, Adventist Health is comprised of 18 hospitals with more than 2,800 beds, nearly 18,000 employees, numerous clinics and outpatient facilities, the largest system of rural health clinics in California, 15 home care agencies and three joint-venture retirement centers with a fourth on the way.  For more information, visit http://www.glendaleadventist.com/.

About NoMachine
Based in Rome, Italy, NoMachine is the creator of award-winning NX software, an enterprise-class solution for secure remote access, application delivery, and hosted desktop deployment.  Since 2001, NoMachine's mission has been to revolutionize the way users access their computing resources across the Internet to make seamless desktop access as easy and widespread as Web browsing.  NoMachine provides a comprehensive software infrastructure stack, core development, and support services built around the self-designed and self-developed NX suite of advanced components. For more information about NoMachine NX technology visit http://www.nomachine.com.
 

About IBM
IBM works with clients around the world to create smarter healthcare systems. This includes better integrated data so doctors, patients and insurers can share information seamlessly and efficiently. IBM also helps clients apply advanced analytics to vast amounts of data to improve medical research, diagnosis and treatment to improve patient care and help reduce healthcare costs.  For more information on IBM, visit http://www.ibm.com/think.



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Technology Brief
Data encryption and security

NX security is guaranteed at every layer involved in the communication process. NX uses SSH public-key encryption and 128 bit volatile random cookie generation.

Multimedia support

NX transparently tunnels Linux multimedia channels. Not only does NX play KDE and Gnome system sounds, but you can listen to MP3s played on the server and local workstation simultaneously.

Unified support for all major remote desktop protocols

Thanks to its outstanding compression performances, NX is able to deliver X, RDP and RFB remote sessions using the same client. This is achieved by translating "foreign" protocols into X-Window, the native protocol of NX.

 


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