Print
Solutions January 2006
Hospital
Gets Anytime, Anywhere Printing
Mount
Sinai Hospital, a 462-bed health
care center affiliated with the
University of Toronto, wanted
to save its increasingly busy
medical staff time. The hospital,
which uses a server from Citrix
Systems Inc., Fort Lauderdale,
Fla., wanted employees to be able
to print documents to any available
printer, regardless of its manufacturer.
“Medical
staff have to travel around the
hospital in order to do their
jobs, and Mount Sinai needed to
ensure that any printing of highly
sensitive documents would be confined
to the nearest available printer,”
says Steve Noyes, the hospital’s
director of Information and Communication
Technology. Although the standard
Citrix printing solution can be
configured to print to any printer,
Mount Sinai’s jobs automatically
were sent to the default printer
of the person who had logged on
to a terminal. “Medical
data could easily end up being
printed in another part of the
hospital,” Noyes says. “This
was not an acceptable security
risk, and had to be overcome.”
Mount
Sinai also wanted to make printing
more efficient for the increasing
number of staff working from outside
the hospital. Many employees complained
that printing from the hospital’s
databases over dial-up internet
connections was slow. Also, the
health care facility wanted to
simplify complicated printer-management
issues faced by the IT department.
Hospital staff utilized 127 different
printer drivers, and simply loading
them all on the newly installed
Citrix servers would be onerous.
“We installed the first
20 printer drivers and said, ‘There
has to be a better way,’”
Noyes says. “It simply made
no sense to continue working with
so many different technologies,
and the situation would only continue
to worsen as manufacturers updated
their printers.”
Simpler
Print Management
Mount
Sinai began searching for a way
to get all the printing functionality
it required, one that could integrate
with its Citrix environment and
fit its budget. Noyes learned
about a server-based solution
called Ingenica’s UniPrint
from Charon Systems, a Canadian
reseller that had helped Mount
Sinai install the hospital’s
Citrix system. (Ingenica, based
in Toronto, and Charon Systems,
which is now called Bell Business
Solutions, are part of Bell Canada.)
Charon Systems explained to Noyes
that UniPrint is designed specifically
to integrate with Citrix MetaFrame
or Microsoft Terminal Services
environments.
UniPrint
replaces multiple manufacturers’
printer drivers with a single
Portable Document Format (PDF)
generator that’s recognized
by all printers, eliminating compatibility
issues. As a result, users can
print from any location to any
available printer. UniPrint also
simplifies printer management
by eliminating the need to load
separate printer drivers into
the Citrix environment.
This
effectively took care of two of
Mount Sinai’s three concerns,
but the facility still faced a
problem. “Although UniPrint
had the functionality to make
it easy for Mount Sinai’s
medical staff to print to any
make of printer, it didn’t
have the ability to ensure that
a document would always print
from the nearest available printer,”
Noyes says. UniPrint was confident
that it could add the capability.
“I was impressed that Ingenica
was prepared to work together
with Mount Sinai to ensure that
the solution would meet all the
hospital’s printing requirements,”
he says.
From
3 Minutes to 10 Seconds
Working
closely with Mount Sinai’s
in-house IT staff, Ingenica spent
several months developing functionality
called Print Pal that would enable
documents to always print from
the nearest available printer.
After successful testing, Mount
Sinai was satisfied that the new
solution would accelerate medical
staff’s printing and eliminate
the security risk associated with
jobs printing in other parts of
the hospital. The complete system
was fully integrated in less than
a week, Noyes says.
Because
UniPrint’s PDF files are
substantially smaller than ones
in other formats, the new
system reduced printer bandwidth
utilization by up to 80 percent,
Noyes says. This meant that even
traditionally large files could
be compressed to a size that did
not dominate hospital bandwidth,
hastening printing for hospital
workers connecting to the database
over dial-up connections. “A
document that used to take me
three minutes to print from a
dial-up connection at home now
only takes about 10 seconds,”
he says.
UniPrint
also has met Mount Sinai’s
budgetary requirements, partly
by significantly reducing help-desk
calls associated with printer-compatibility
issues. “The solution has
been so problem-free, Mount Sinai
has yet to call the Ingenica support
staff,” Noyes says.
Better
Patient Care
Noyes
says UniPrint’s most important
benefit is Mount Sinai’s
staff can move throughout the
hospital and know that all documents
will print to the nearest available
printer, regardless of the equipment’s
manufacturer. Aside from being
more convenient and faster than
having to select a specific printer
for every job, this also ensures
that confidential information
isn’t accidentally printed
in another part of the facility.
“We’re
trying to eliminate steps from
the physicians’ computing
processes, so that they can do
what they need and then move on,”
Noyes says. “Mount Sinai
Hospital believes that technology
should be utilized to make it
easier for staff to better care
for patients, and by providing
the hospital with a cost-effective
printing solution that makes it
easier for medical staff to do
their job, UniPrint has certainly
helped the hospital’s IT
department achieve that goal.”
—Michael
O’Keeffe