Dental technology blog

Error
  • JUser::_load: Unable to load user with id: 377
Tuesday, 11 December 2012 15:52

The Implementation of New Technology in Your Dental Practice (Part 3) Featured

Written by 
Rate this item
(0 votes)

If you’ve been following my three part series on implementing technology change in the dental practice, you will have read about the three areas that need success for an over-all implementation win – people, technology and process.  In this third installment I will speak to the process component. 

I characterized the “people” area as being the most complex and the “technology” area as being the most intimidating.  The “process” area is the most neglected. 

How will the new change fit within the workflow of your practice?  Am I simply replacing an existing process with a new, faster, cheaper process?  Am I changing the workflow in a particular area completely?

These are questions you should ask and acknowledge the risk inherent in the associated answers.

Think of your practice as consisting of a series of workflows.  These might be administrative workflows that are exercised with every patient or they may be clinical workflows that might change with the services being rendered. 

A technology change may affect one, several, many or all of these.  The larger the affect, the greater the risk of the change.  If you are changing the adhesive you use to cement crowns, it will only affect a small number of clinical workflows and unless there are significant preparation changes, they will have little effect on these. 

On the other hand, let’s say you are going paperless in your practice.  This will touch on almost every administrative workflow and many clinical processes and increase the “process” risk of implementing the change greatly.  

Here are my pointers to improve the odds of success in the “process” area of introducing change.

  1. First identify all of the processes that will be impacted by a technology change.
  2. For each process ask the question, “Will the process be more efficient?”  You might think that a technology change will always introduce more efficiency, but this is not always the case.  Maybe you are giving up time in one area to improve patient safety or to improve your A/R.  If the process will become less efficient, then allow for more time to complete the activity.
  3. Who is responsible for this process?  Make sure they are fully trained in the new technology and that they understand the overall goals in making the change in the practice.
  4. Look at the impact this change will have on adjacent processes.  If you become wildly more efficient in doing “X” and the “X” process feeds into “Y”, what will be the impact on the “Y” process if the work comes more quickly?
  5. If the technology were to fail, do you have a work around?  Can you revert back to the old process permanently or temporarily while the failure is addressed?  A plan “B” is a handy thing to have

A technology change consists of technology, people and process.  Success in all three is definitely a right click

Read 2046 times
Login to post comments

Search the blog

Free digital transition e-course

Electronic prescribing with eRx

Integrate electronic prescribing into DAISY and elevate patient safety, prescription security, and efficiency.

eRx empowers dentists with rapid access to each patient’s prescription record and potential contraindications, triggering alerts when drug interactions are found.

Integrated electronic prescribing also simplifies insurance formulary cross-referencing. Fill and refill prescriptions from any location using your mobile device.

eRx handles record-keeping automatically behind the scenes – in real-time.

Get your free DAISY ERx demo today!

DMC’s Redundant Backup Solution is: 

  • Fail-safe. Data is backed up and stored to two separate locations.
  • Automated. Backup automatically protects selected data.
  • Monitored.Data protection and backup is maintained by DMC.

    The secret to a pain free digital radiography upgrade

    When you purchase digital X-ray equipment through DMC, we’ll manage all components of your X-ray imaging upgrade — and remain your first and only support call for life.

    More downtime means less revenue, so our entire digital radiography business is focused on ensuring a seamless transition to the latest digital X-ray imaging equipment.

    When you choose DMC for a complete X-ray systems upgrade, you can count on:

      1. One point of contact
      2. Personalized configuration
      3. Comprehensive training
      4. Minimal office closure
      5. Less stress

        Schedule a personal consultation with a digital radiography specialist today for a cost-effective and worry-free transition to a fully digital practice.

        ScheduleAConsultationButton_v2

        The new DAISY Mobile web application for dentists is here

        DAISY Mobile lets you access patient and scheduling information directly from your smartphone.

        Get anywhere, anytime access to:

        • Check patient records
        • View and edit appointments
        • Confirm that a caller is a patient
        • Create, edit and view clinical notes
        • Issue electronic prescriptions (enrollment in DAISY eRx required)

        A quick access icon on your smartphone takes you directly to the DAISY mobile dental app — there’s no software to download or install.

        Available to all practices running DAISY, this mobile app for dentists helps you keep patient records confidential by eliminating the need to leave the office with paper reports.

        Own a smartphone? Leverage the power of DAISY’s new mobile dental application today.

        ReadMoreUp

        DAISY DVD overview

        Top Dental Software Video Overview

        Contact DMC

          • 10505 S.E. 17th Ave.
          • Milwaukie, OR 97222
          • 800-368-6401
          • Email DMC

           Dental software TwitterDental software facebook fan pageDental software RSS feed