by 
            DeRoyal News | May 01, 2015
            
        
        
	The University of Tennessee Medical Center and DeRoyal Industries are partnering to bring an innovative supplies tracking system with the potential to revolutionize efficiency and patient safety in the operating room.
 
        
            KNOXVILLE, Tenn., 
April 22, 2015 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The University of Tennessee Medical 
Center and DeRoyal Industries are partnering to bring an innovative 
supplies tracking system with the potential to revolutionize efficiency 
and patient safety in the operating room. The system, Continuum®OR, 
created by DeRoyal and tested and refined at the medical center, uses 
radio frequency identification (RFID) technology to develop surgery 
procedure supply lists specific to each surgeon (doctor preference 
cards), improve inventory management and supply tracking, and enhance 
quality care. 
"As in most facilities, the tracking of supplies was primarily a manual
 system often performed by clinical staff," said Brian C. DeBusk, Chief 
Executive Officer at DeRoyal Industries. "The new system serves to 
automate and drive accurate doctor preference card maintenance in a way 
that the manual process never could."
The average rate of items collected for a surgical procedure that are 
not used has been estimated to be as high 70 percent. As a result of the
 collaboration the medical center has seen improvements to operating 
room efficiencies and patient safety.
"Surgical supplies specifically associated with a surgical case are 
automatically tracked to the patient," said Becky Ashin, vice president 
of the Advanced Orthopaedic Center at The University of Tennessee 
Medical Center. "The orthopaedic operating rooms recognized a 99 percent
 read rate of supplies used in every case by putting supply packaging 
into this specially designed container. This allows us to accurately 
track supplies, reduce traffic in and out of operating rooms to retrieve
 needed supplies and improve recycling by separating bio hazardous 
waste," 
Ashin noted the next step is to expand the Continuum®OR project through
 the remainder of the year to 30 additional operating rooms. UT Medical 
Center also will begin tracking implants and instrument trays via RFID. 
The ongoing program will expand as additional benefits of having tagged 
supply items are identified.
ABOUT THE UNIVERSITY OF TENNESSEE MEDICAL CENTER
The mission of The University of Tennessee Medical Center, the region's
 only hospital to achieve status as a Magnet® recognized organization, 
is to serve through healing, education and discovery. UT Medical Center,
 a 581-bed, not-for-profit academic medical center, serves as a referral
 center for Eastern Tennessee, Southeast Kentucky and Western North 
Carolina. The medical center, the region's only Level I Trauma Center, 
is one of the largest employers in Knoxville. For more information about
 The University of Tennessee Medical Center, visit online at www.utmedicalcenter.org.
ABOUT DEROYAL
Founded in 1973, medical device manufacturer DeRoyal is committed to 
improving both the clinical quality and economic health of its 
customers. With 2,000 employees, 2.5 million square feet (~232,000 
square meters) under roof, operations in six countries and five U.S. 
states, and manufacturing assets on three continents, DeRoyal brings 
value to its customers in several distinct markets; these include 
surgical devices, unitized delivery systems, orthopedic supports & 
bracing, wound care dressings as well as orthopedic implants. Key core 
competencies include injection molding, device assembly, metal 
fabrication, converting, electronics assembly, and sterilization 
services. DeRoyal combines these fundamental manufacturing capabilities 
with its own unique services and information technology tools to deliver
 unparalleled value to its customers with a particular expertise in 
disrupting dysfunctional markets. For additional DeRoyal product 
information, visit the DeRoyal website at www.deroyal.com.
A photo accompanying this release is available at: http://www.globenewswire.com/newsroom/prs/?pkgid=32341
Jim Ragonese
Public Relations Operations
The University of Tennessee Medical Center
(865) 305-6845
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