
From foreground to background: administrator on duty, bed flow manager, director of the emergency department and transfer center, Mmekon Ekon, Senior Consultant, GE Healthcare Partners and physician on duty (POD)[/caption] Elon Musk recently announced plans to create high-speed driverless cars to transport airline passengers in tunnels from downtown Chicago to O’Hare International airport. If this takes off, the transformative technology behind the project will join the likes of other advancements that have forever changed the airline industry including, global positioning software (GPS) that helps air traffic controllers safely reroute planes and real-time data processing tools that provide passengers with minute-by-minute updates on flight information. Although the airline industry has managed to safely and efficiently move large volumes of planes and passengers around some of the world’s busiest airports, the healthcare industry has struggled to do the same for hospital patients, until now. Mmekom Ekon may not be a Musk-like billionaire tech entrepreneur but as a biomedical and systems engineer, she is transforming how patients access and move through Oregon Health & Science University Hospital (OHSU), a 576-bed teaching hospital and Level I trauma center in Portland, Oregon. [caption id="attachment_12843" align="alignright" width="415"]


Front row left to right: Sreelatha Surendranathan, Senior Engineering Lead, Kathy Martin, Senior Solutions Director, and Andy Day, Principal, Command Center Partnerships. Back row left to right: Jim Livas, Senior Program Manager and Jeff Terry, Command Centers, CEO[/caption] “There are patient examples in which PODs were able to identify a condition of a patient at an external hospital that was not otherwise seen, they escalated it, and had the patients come to OHSU as quick as possible,” said Ekon. “When I see something like that, it gives me a sense of achievement that this is a role that I helped create. When I see the impact of how I’m helping patients get access to the hospital, it’s something that keeps me going. It’s amazing.” More women than men are at the helm inside all three of GE Healthcare’s current NASA-style hospital command centers. As mission controllers, the staff brings a diverse and solid understanding of clinical knowledge, operational workflows, follow through, process rigor and communications. Sreelatha Surendranathan, Senior Engineering Lead for GE Healthcare Partners, leads the team responsible for creating the AI and predictive analytics that are displayed on the Wall of Analytics (WOA) and mobile devices inside GEHC’s command centers. She says it doesn’t matter what software her team writes, the command center would not exist without the combined expertise and level of insight the whole solution brings. “Engineers don’t need to be taught to write code, we need to understand how healthcare works. The women who manage mission control walk us through, here is how a patient comes in from the ambulance, how they are observed, how they interact with the nursing staff, they know hospital operations and clinical workflows inside and out and that is the reason why command centers have people with those strengths.”
