
The National Heart Institute of Malaysia, a 400-bed specialized heart hospital, was the first hospital in Malaysia to achieve HIMSS EMRAM Stage 6, demonstrating its commitment to advanced digital healthcare and patient safety.
The hospital needs to achieve EMRAM Stage 7 certification to qualify as a flagship hospital for medical tourism under Malaysian government requirements. Its existing system, Trakcare, was primarily used for scheduling and administrative functions, with all clinical documentation still on paper, creating inefficiencies and limiting data utilization.
While technical challenges were significant, adapting to new workflows and digital processes presented substantial people-related hurdles that required strong support from top management and a clear vision to overcome resistance to change, said Piyanun Yenjit, founder and managing director of Apuk, an implementation partner for Medicomp that specializes in clinical documentation systems and EMRAM consulting.
Apuk is in HIMSS25 Booth 454, belonging to Medicomp.
'One input for maximum output'
"The hospital was evaluating comprehensive clinical documentation platforms that offered structured data capture, standardized medical terminology and seamless integration with their existing hospital information system," she explained. "They specifically needed systems featuring 'one input for maximum output' efficiency, including automated documentation capabilities, proactive alerts at the point of care and support for collaborative care planning.
"Being an academic hospital, they prioritized high-quality structured data that could be leveraged for analytics while being easily customizable to support their clinical workflows," she continued.
Implementation began with comprehensive workflow analysis to eliminate redundant processes and align with international healthcare standards.
"The clinical informatics team customized documentation templates to meet requirements from 33 cardiac specialists, while technical teams collaborated on API integration between systems," Yenjit said. "Despite infrastructure challenges including database issues and user access limitations, the strong support from hospital leadership drove the project forward.
"The implementation concluded with user acceptance testing, staff training, and a phased go-live approach that began with nursing documentation before expanding to physician documentation," she added.
A big win for nurses
The implementation significantly improved efficiencies, particularly among nursing staff who benefited from auto-population capabilities that carried forward relevant information between templates and eliminated duplicate data entry.
"Communication between physicians and nurses improved through shared documentation views and task management features, enhancing care coordination," Yenjit explained. "The system's proactive clinical alerts at the point of care enabled faster, more informed decision making while streamlining workflows by allowing clinicians to input data once for multiple purposes.
"Though there was an initial learning curve, the structured documentation ultimately improved patient safety, reduced errors and enhanced overall operational efficiency," she said.
The implementation was instrumental in achieving EMRAM Level 6 by providing the structured clinical documentation and terminology standards required for certification.
Closed-loop medication management and clinical pathways
"The system enabled advanced clinical decision support through proactive alerts, improving patient safety and care consistency," Yenjit noted. "By transitioning from entirely paper-based operations to electronic documentation with standardized medical terminology, the hospital could meet EMRAM requirements for closed-loop medication management and clinical pathways.
"As they prepare for EMRAM Stage 7 assessment, they're now leveraging this structured data for clinical outcomes analysis, specifically demonstrating how they use data analytics to improve clinical outcomes – a key requirement for achieving the highest certification level," she continued.
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