Wallowa & OHN: Connected to the Community

By Kathleen Ellyn
Wallowa County Chieftain

Wallowa Memorial Hospital is one of the first rural hospitals to take advantage of a new federally supported Rural Health Care Pilot Program (RHCPP) that will result in high-speed Internet connection between hospitals, clinics and health education institutions across the country.

The program, sponsored by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) will link the nations hospitals, clinics, public health offices, physicians, mental health, dental and optical clinics and health education institutions to provide better information sharing and education.

In Oregon, the program is being managed by the Oregon Health Network, which was created in 2007 with the support from the legislature and the governor. The FCC awarded $417 million in funds nationwide to establish the network and OHN was the fifth largest recipient of the grant money, garnering $20.2 million.

On Dec. 4, 2009, OHN celebrated the launch of its broadband network applications center in Beaverton. The company also reported the shipment of three leaf nodes (routers) to Wallowa Memorial Hospital, Blue Mountain Community College in Baker City, and Oregon Coast Community College in Newport.

What the connection does for Wallowa Memorial Hospital is save a bucket of money and position the hospital to expand its services dramatically, said Dave Harman, administrator of the Wallowa County Health Care District. “Prior to OHN we had a T-1 line (a dedicated phone line) with a capacity of only 1.5 megabits through the Picture Archival Computer System (PACS) that connects the hospital with radiologists in Bend,” he said. “That is way too slow and we were paying $1,700 per month for it.”

Establishing a new system, however, was out of the questions. “For some communities the cost of establishing the infrastructure could be as much as half a million dollars,” said OHN executive director Kim Lamb. “That’s a huge barrier, and that’s why they don’t have it.”

Now communities will get that infrastructure for free. The new connection through OHN at Wallowa Memorial Hospital will run seven times as fast (10 megabits), will cost only about $150 per month, and will link the hospital to many more services. One of the first services Wallowa Memorial will pick up is a new connection, through OHN, to the cardiac network in Spokane, Harman said. The cardiac monitoring equipment on the Wallowa County end will be paid for by a separate funding source.  Hospital administrators just learned that they were awarded a nearly $400,000 USDA distance learning grant to purchase that equipment.

The true cost of the OHN broadband service would be approximately $2,200 per month for Wallowa Memorial Hospital, but OHN is able to establish the fiber optic and Ethernet infrastructure free and the FCC will absorb 85 percent of the ongoing cost for the next five years. As part of its long-range plan, OHN is also looking into ways to continue to cover some of those costs beyond the initial five years, according to Lamb. Other long-term plans are to extend the service to nursing homes, businesses, and other for-profit organizations.

Another benefit of the system is that it allows for expanded services at any time.

“We can upgrade whenever we need to,” Harman said. “When we had T-1, we had no upgrade capability at all.” The benefit to colleges, such as Blue Mountain Community College, is that the connection will allow them to expand their academic offerings while retaining students — thereby improving local economic stability in addition to “equalizing the quality of life difference between rural and urban life,” Lamb said.

 

FCC Seeks Public Comment for Changes to National Broadband Plan

The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) announced it is making changes to the National Broadband Plan, which is designed to assist thousands of health providers at hospitals and clinics in the U.S. who lack adequate broadband access and capability. The announcement, made July 15, begins a 30-day open window for public comment. Comments can be sent to: Federal Communications Commission, 445 12th Street SW; Washington, DC 20554 or via email, fccinfo@fcc.gov.

To view a video of the Open Commission meeting in its entirety, click here.

Updates to the FCC’s National Broadband Plan include the development of a permanent $400 million fund to further broadband infrastructure and build out of health information capabilities in rural areas. This financial support is an additional funding opportunity, outside of the current Rural Health Care Pilot Program (RHCPP) of which Oregon Health Network (OHN) manages for the state, and the standard Rural Health Care Program (RHC).

Read more

Progress at the OHN Network Ops Center

EasyStreet technicians

26 provider sites are actively connected to and being monitored by our Network Operations Center!

Read more