Yale-New Haven Hospital

August 2013 Access Control & Identity Management, Healthcare (Industry)

It’s an institution that boasts several medical firsts — the first X-ray in the United States in 1896, the first to use chemotherapy to treat cancer in 1942 and, in 1949, the development of the world’s first artificial heart pump, a device now part of the permanent collection of the Smithsonian.

For Yale-New Haven Hospital (YNHH), a 1500-bed tertiary care hospital with world-renowned specialties in paediatrics, cancer treatment and psychiatrics, technological advancements are part of its DNA. The teaching hospital for the prestigious Yale School of Medicine, YNHH is the flagship facility of Yale New Haven Health System, Connecticut’s largest healthcare system, which encompasses a host of other treatment facilities dotting New England’s southern shoreline.

The YNHH organisation and its parent health system occupy buildings that range from brand new to more than 150 years old. The cornucopia of access control and video surveillance technologies that accompanied these facilities, ranging in size, age and technologies, presented their own integration challenges for security and safety staff.

Hospital security officials knew an upgrade to this disparate and diverse array of equipment would allow them to centralise the management and maintenance of security operations of the major YNHH facilities, a list that includes such locations as the former Hospital of Saint Raphael Campus, and a neighbouring New Haven hospital that YNHH acquired in September 2012. Other sites include a new large, off-site IT administration and Outpatient Clinical Care facility in nearby North Haven and eight other major satellite inpatient and outpatient treatment centres. This streamlining would represent savings not only for Protective Services’ Security Technology Division, but also for Patrol Operations, which performs foot and vehicle patrols, security response units, emergency dispatch, and locksmith duties for all YNHH facilities.

On the access control side, the realisation that the hospital’s existing access control platform would no longer give YNHH a technological edge occurred during the construction of Smilow Cancer Hospital in 2009, a 17-storey, 46 451-square-metre building on downtown New Haven’s Park Street. Because the system was not scalable to meet the needs of the new building, this marked a turning point for the hospital and the direction of the security technology, said Marvin White, manager of physical security - Protective Services, Yale-New Haven Hospital.

Information and productivity

“We knew that our mix of different systems was not giving us the critical information we needed to make the split-second and strategic decisions about our on-going security operations,” White said. “Not only did we need to have this information for our own department, but we lacked the system intelligence to provide that information to the rest of our organisation.”

With a new technology direction that involved Johnson Controls, who was selected as the systems integrator for Smilow Cancer Hospital and an upgrade and expansion of the video and access systems, YNHH chose the C·CURE 9000 security and event management platform from Software House. The team carved out a phased approach that would ultimately transition more than 12 individual YNHH sites onto C·CURE 9000 over the hospital’s central network.

Such a sweeping overhaul of the hospital’s security technology was considered necessary by hospital officials to maintain and enhance not only the institution’s level of safety and security but as an overall contribution to YNHH’s renowned standard of patient care.

“We’re very proud of our position as one of the leading hospitals in the United States, and staying ahead of the technology curve is paramount in keeping patients, visitors, and staff safe,” said Nicholas Proto, director, Protective Services, Parking and Transit, Yale-New Haven Hospital.

The multi-tiered plan would also include the significant undertaking of updating access credentials for more than 12 000 workers in the YNHH network as well as additional personnel from Yale New Haven Health System. This massive upgrade would affect over 1000 doors and readers in the YNHH network alone.

In tandem with the access control project, Johnson Controls set out to upgrade YNHH’s analogue CCTV system to a more modern IP surveillance network that would allow for a similar centralised command and control approach. Using the victor unified video management system from American Dynamics, which merges video from IP and analogue devices into a single, unified interface, security personnel can view feeds from more than 800 cameras from the central command centre on York Street.

In addition, the hospital installed its first thermal imaging camera, which is also running on the victor unified management system. YNHH installed the camera to monitor an employee parking at its North Haven Medical Centre. The thermal imaging camera enables YNHH to see through the foliage of the trees and track the heat of people and works in conjunction with surveillance cameras, emergency phones and the ability to dispatch based on suspect activity.

Replacing barcodes

To accomplish such a comprehensive and multi-stage migration and expansion – and avoid issuing brand new credentials to nearly 20 000 employees – the team devised a strategy to run C·CURE 9000 on the front end using proximity technology with the legacy access control system running in the background to support the existing magnetic stripe cards. At the Saint Raphael Campus, C·CURE 9000 is in the process of being installed to replace barcode technology from yet another legacy access control platform.

Workstations running C·CURE 9000 and the legacy system are placed next to each other and are both tied to the HR database for new badge creation. When a new employee credential is created, the feed from the HR database goes into both C·CURE 9000 and the legacy system so that the new cardholders can use readers on both systems, said Michael Parks, account executive with Johnson Controls.

“The deployment of this new centralised management platform will integrate the hospital’s disparate security systems together to make YNHH’s overall security operation and response more efficient and effective. The ability to see both video and access alarms on one unified platform provides the necessary information to the officers monitoring the security operations,” Parks said. “Once the hospital has fully deployed C·CURE 9000, they will have the benefit of expanding and scaling the system to meet their needs, however big they might grow.”

As part of the transition, new iSTAR controllers from Software House were installed in IT closets throughout the YNHH network. Because the data closets are very small, there is little space for technicians to move around making it difficult to perform on-site programming. However, using the iSTAR Configuration Utility (ICU), technicians could easily perform remote programming, which was a great benefit to the hardware transition. To save additional space Protective Services incorporated rack mounted iStars in the Emergency Department renovation.

With the addition of victor, migrating to IP cameras has been a much easier transition. New facilities, like the New Haven off-site emergency room and an ambulatory care centre scheduled to open in early 2013 with more than 20 IP cameras and about 30 card readers, will be easily added to the hospital’s IT network. Simple PoE switches feed the video back to the hospital’s server farm in New Haven, where it’s recorded on a bank of 22 VideoEdge network video servers.

Customised reporting

In all, Yale-New Haven’s 900 cameras – about 150 of which are analogue – are viewable on five 42-inch monitors in the security control centre facility at the hospital’s main campus. All other systems, such as the hospital’s Motorola radio system and PPM 2000 incident management software are also centralised here. More than 150 panic alarms from the hospital’s Lynx Duress and Mass Notification System, deployed in areas such as Psychiatrics and the Adult Emergency Department, are also fed back to the dispatch facility into C·CURE 9000.

Centralised reporting functions, as part of the access control software, were also an integral part of new systems success. The Business Intelligence Reporting Suite (BIRS) from Software House is able to provide White and his team with customised reports from C·CURE 9000 that can be in turn provided to other directors within the hospital network. Those reports could include card reader usage over a given period of time or specific data on badge holders who accessed a particular area over the previous weekend.

“A standardisation project of this size, nearly 464 515 square metre of real estate, on a corporate level will allow us to monitor, track and analyse everything with greater ease,” said White. “We’ll have a snapshot of the system history at any given time, and we’ll know what types of things need to be attended to and how we can continue to improve.”

The new access and video systems have also allowed the hospital to enhance other areas of its operations, including internal food theft in cafeteria locations. A number of card readers are installed on refrigerators and freezers, while 12 new cameras in the East Pavilion cafeteria are mounted above cash registers.

The benefits from a standardised, enterprise-level security upgrade can also help YNHH comply with a multitude of industry regulations that govern hospital operations. For example, the hospital is currently exploring how the access and video systems can streamline YNHH compliance with new rules from The joint commission concerning the storage of certain prescription narcotics by using electronic locks and card readers tied into C·CURE 9000. Using the security management system, security officials will also be able to centrally manage access to the hospital’s more than 175 prescription cabinets as well as use BIRS reporting to generate audit trail reports.

To date, about 50% of YNHH locations have transitioned to C·CURE 9000, including sites such as a paediatric radiology centre in Norwalk and the Saint Raphael Campus. When the upgrades are complete sometime this spring, YNHH will have an established platform capable of supporting healthy, scalable growth for years to come.

For more information contact Tyco Security Products, +27 (0)82 566 5274, [email protected], www.tycosecurityproducts.com



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