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Children’s of Alabama Begins Next-Generation Healthcare Transformation with an Aruba ESP-Based Network

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Aruba, a Hewlett Packard Enterprise company (NYSE: HPE), announced the deployment of an Aruba ESP-based network at Children’s of Alabama, enhancing healthcare services through improved technology. This new network aims to streamline operations, reduce costs, and improve patient experiences, with significant capabilities for telemedicine and IoT devices. The shift from Cisco to Aruba solutions is expected to reduce maintenance costs by 25-33% and support a modern healthcare environment. The initiative aligns with Children’s ambition to enhance digital transformation in response to evolving patient care needs.

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  • Deployment of Aruba ESP network at Children's of Alabama enhances healthcare services.
  • Reduction in maintenance costs by 25-33% compared to previous Cisco network.
  • Support for telemedicine, improving patient access to care during the pandemic.
  • Unified operations enabling better management of over 100,000 IoT devices.
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  • None.

Aruba, a Hewlett Packard Enterprise company (NYSE: HPE), today announced that Children’s of Alabama, ranked among the best pediatric medical centers in the nation by US News & World Report, is deploying an Aruba ESP (Edge Services Platform)-based network to further the transformation of its healthcare services. Using Aruba wireless, switching, management and security solutions, Children’s of Alabama is implementing critical new capabilities that improve patient experiences, while streamlining operations and reducing costs.

Children's of Alabama, ranked as one of the best pediatric medical centers in the nation, has deployed an Aruba ESP-based network to streamline operations and improve patient experiences. (Photo: Children's of Alabama)

Children's of Alabama, ranked as one of the best pediatric medical centers in the nation, has deployed an Aruba ESP-based network to streamline operations and improve patient experiences. (Photo: Children's of Alabama)

Children’s of Alabama provided care for children from every county in Alabama, 42 other states, and seven foreign countries last year, representing more than 677,000 outpatient visits and 15,000+ inpatient admissions. One of the largest pediatric facilities in the country, Children’s operates a main campus of three million square feet, as well as 14 remote clinics, and is the primary site for the University of Alabama at Birmingham’s pediatric medicine, surgery, psychiatry, research and residency programs.

Children’s had previously used Cisco networking equipment but as the provider began evolving its patient care, moving to Epic for electronic health records (EHR), and adding services such as telemedicine and video-intensive care, remote operations for poison control and call centers, and location services and wayfinding for patient-facing applications, the IT team realized it needed a more secure and cost-effective solution that could grow with its needs. In addition, with more IoT, specialty medical, and mobile devices connecting to its network, Children’s needed to determine how to both secure these devices and leverage their data to enable quicker decision-making, provide better care and services to patients, and adapt to the changing COVID-19 pandemic environment.

“Things move so much more quickly now, and our existing architecture really wasn’t keeping up,” said Children’s of Alabama CIO, Bob Sarnecki. “We had Wi-Fi capability, but that’s not the same as really delivering a solid mobile experience for things like video visits or for securely connecting the approximately 100,000 IoT devices on our network such as workstations, IV pumps, beds and HVAC controls.”

According to Sarnecki, the IT team had also embarked on an open architecture journey to allow staff to bring in their own devices – so long as they could be connected to the network securely – but this was becoming an increasingly difficult management challenge with their existing network. The COVID-19 pandemic further compounded these issues, causing Children’s to accelerate initiatives for delivering healthcare services remotely.

“We can’t really think in terms of physical locations anymore because our virtual presence has expanded significantly since COVID-19 started,” said Sarnecki. “We need to be able to deliver healthcare securely, wherever and whenever it’s needed.”

These combined challenges led Sarnecki and his team to consult with partner, Layer 3 Communications, and ultimately, implement an Aruba network. Using Aruba Wi-Fi 6 Access Points (APs), Remote Access Points (RAPs), CX-Series Switches and ClearPass for both wired and wireless network access control, Children’s has unified operations, management, and security, reducing maintenance costs by 25-33 percent as compared to its previous Cisco network. More importantly, the new network is enabling a host of healthcare applications and services that allow Children’s to elevate the quality of patient care.

“To manage a patient in a modern healthcare environment, we need a network that can support our EHR transformation, device tracking, patient tracking, IoT, remote medicine, wayfinding, and applications we may not even know of yet,” Sarnecki commented.

The Aruba network is becoming central to enabling Children’s telemedicine program – often the only means of delivering care during the pandemic. When COVID-19 hit, Children’s immediately integrated Zoom into its scheduling applications, began sending patient notifications via text message, and fully integrated its clinical systems within just three weeks. Children’s is now seeing about 150 patients each day via telemedicine and the network is vital to facilitating this service.

In addition, Aruba RAPs have enabled remote work for many of the staff at Children’s. Employees of Children’s Poison Control Center, which also services the entire state of Alabama, are using RAPs to connect their workstations, phones and headsets to the corporate network from their homes. Telephone triage, IT, and administrative staff are also using RAPs to work from home securely and efficiently, and the Children’s heart clinic, located 200 miles from the main campus, is using them to connect physicians and staff to critical resources. Sarnecki noted that many of the contractors Children’s employs for EHR work, who previously would have been onsite for two-year periods requiring hoteling and associated expenses, can now be assigned a RAP to conduct their work remotely, too.

As Children’s continues to enhance patient care, the IT team is evaluating additional Aruba solutions that can help support the transformation. With location-ready Aruba APs already installed, IT is assessing wayfinding applications to help visitors and patients navigate their way through the facilities, allow quick and easy patient registration, and enable tracking of both patients and equipment throughout the hospital. They are also assessing User Experience Insight (UXI) for easier identification and remediation of network problems before they occur and to ensure an optimal user experience.

With its new infrastructure in place, Sarnecki is confident that he and his team can tackle their ambitious plans for continuing the medical center’s transformation.

“With our Aruba network, we are building an architecture that will support state-of-the-art, 21st century healthcare,” he said.

About Aruba, a Hewlett Packard Enterprise company

Aruba, a Hewlett Packard Enterprise company, is the global leader in secure, intelligent edge-to-cloud networking solutions that use AI to automate the network, while harnessing data to drive powerful business outcomes. With Aruba ESP (Edge Services Platform) and as-a-service options, Aruba takes a cloud-native approach to helping customers meet their connectivity, security, and financial requirements across campus, branch, data center, and remote worker environments, covering all aspects of wired, wireless LAN, and wide area networking (WAN).

To learn more, visit Aruba at www.arubanetworks.com. For real-time news updates, follow Aruba on Twitter and Facebook, and for the latest technical discussions on mobility and Aruba products, visit the Airheads Community at community.arubanetworks.com.

FAQ

What network technology is being implemented by Children’s of Alabama?

Children’s of Alabama is deploying an Aruba ESP-based network to enhance its healthcare services.

What is the expected reduction in maintenance costs with the new Aruba network?

The new Aruba network is expected to reduce maintenance costs by 25-33% compared to the previous Cisco network.

How is the Aruba network impacting telemedicine at Children’s of Alabama?

The Aruba network is central to facilitating telemedicine services, allowing about 150 patients to be seen each day remotely.

What challenges led Children’s of Alabama to switch from Cisco networking equipment?

Children’s of Alabama faced challenges with its Cisco network's ability to securely manage a growing number of IoT devices and facilitate remote patient care.

What are the key benefits of the Aruba ESP network for patient care?

The Aruba network enhances patient care by streamlining operations, enabling better device management, and supporting innovative healthcare applications.

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