Health

Chainway's mobile solutions aim to bring about an overall improvement in patient safety and make care more efficient.

Health

Our world is becoming more and more connected, and barcode and RFID technologies are increasingly valued in the healthcare sector. Chainway provides a mobile medical information solution based on IoT and Cloud computing technologies, an integrated handheld computer and compatible software, seamlessly connected to HIS and EMR systems via Wi-Fi or 4G networks. By integrating all these elements into the nurse's workflow, our solution aims to bring overall improvement to the hospital's healthcare system.

Patient admission 

The key to improving both the quality of care and patient safety is to be able to identify a patient quickly and accurately, and to have instant access to essential information during the care process. The barcode wristband provides each patient with electronic identification, essential for patient verification.

Drug administration

Medication administration error (MAE) is one of the most common types of adverse event in hospitalized patients, and the most frequent cause of preventable death. To offer the highest degree of patient safety, clinicians need to track medications throughout the healthcare process, using Mobile computers equipped with barcode and/or RFID technology.

Collecting vital signs

Nurses regularly collect a patient's vital signs to help assess their overall physical health. This data is captured on the Chainway healthcare mobile computer and transmitted to the hospital's HIS system for real-time monitoring and further analysis.

Access information

The fact that healthcare providers have rapid access to the information they need at the point of care determines how quickly hospital staff can respond to emergencies and make critical decisions. Accountability, accuracy and mobility of medical data will benefit both the hospital and the patient.

Blood bag management

Effective blood inventory management can be a matter of life and death. As a routine part of medical work, blood transfusion is riddled with the risk of error in a manual system.

Pharmacy management

In healthcare, you need to keep your pharmacy operations as efficient and accurate as possible. In other words, the right drug and the right dose must be dispensed to the right patient at the right time. Particularly when dispensing prescription drugs, a pharmacist must always compare medicines to prescriptions.

Sample collection

Specimen collection plays an essential role in establishing a critical diagnosis. It's the beginning of the point-of-care, and only the correct labeling and identification of medical samples can ensure patient safety and effective treatment.

Laboratory management

To make an accurate diagnosis, doctors respond to precise test results from patient samples. Marking and tracking laboratory samples and specimens with barcodes is a highly effective way of avoiding errors before they enter caregivers' workflows.

Medical equipment management

Hospital equipment ranges from basic wheelchairs and IV stands to sophisticated multi-million dollar imaging laboratory equipment. These assets, especially valuable equipment, need to be tracked for financial accountability and the ability to respond immediately to an emergency.

Inventory management

Having complete visibility of medical consumables, knowing where medical equipment is at the point of care, and properly managing confidential documents are all reasons why inventory management is important for healthcare facilities.

Medical waste management

Hospitals deal with medical waste on a daily basis. This waste, particularly hazardous waste and chemical waste, must be properly treated before it becomes a danger to people and the environment.

Real-time communication

Effective communication between nurses and other healthcare professionals determines how quickly a healthcare facility can make informed decisions and improve patient care.