Cauterizing Criminal Activity
CoxHealth uses network video to stem narcotics thefts and vandalism
- By Fredrik Nilsson
- Jun 01, 2010
Whether it is staff dipping into the pharmaceuticals or drug
abusers looking to snatch a quick fix, narcotics theft has become
a serious problem for hospitals. But when your hospital
campus stretches across more than 52 acres -- including
multiple buildings, parking lots and parking garages -- the
magnitude of additional criminal behavior the security department might face can
be absolutely daunting.
CoxHealth in Springfield, Mo., had been a long-time advocate of using electronic
surveillance to protect people and property within its vast premises. In fact,
hospital security was already monitoring more than 300 video cameras attached
to multiple DVR-based analog systems. But the technology’s gaps in coverage and
archiving constraints made it difficult to review weekly incident reports and gather
forensic video in a timely manner.
When the hospital built a new 780-car parking garage last year, public safety
managers decided it was time to upgrade to a more robust network-based security
system. The new system would allow CoxHealth to centralize surveillance, helping
staff spot trouble more quickly and dispatch mobile officers more effectively. Consolidating
video storage on a network server would minimize hardware in their
already-overcrowded monitoring center, provide greater archiving capacity and
simplify incident retrieval to expedite investigations and criminal prosecution.
Augmenting Enforcement Patrols
As commissioned law enforcement within the county, CoxHealth security officers
have full arrest powers when policing the property. They file their own reports, and
when a case goes to trial, they often can provide video evidence.
“Unlike a private security force, we’re able to handle our own problems,” said Joe Rushing, director of public safety and security for CoxHealth. “We monitor
our cameras 24/7 and are always on the lookout for someone causing trouble.”
Once hospital officials made the decision to upgrade, they hired NetWatch,
a Springfield-based IP surveillance system provider, to unify the video systems
campus-wide. The integrator deployed an array of Axis PTZ and HD-quality
network cameras in the new parking garage, in the CoxHealth Surgery Center
and throughout the premises. They also have begun network-enabling hundreds
of existing analog cameras through AXIS 241Q video encoders. NetWatch chose
a robust OnSSI video management system to control the surveillance operation
because of both its ease of use and ability to accommodate the hospital’s future
enterprise-wide surveillance plans.
To preserve the chain-of-evidence standards required by the courts, NetWatch
runs the surveillance system on its own separate, secure video network.
“This way, we know who’s looking at our video and who has access to our
servers,” Rushing said. “A defense attorney doesn’t have any grounds to raise the
issue of video tampering and get our evidence thrown out of court.”
With such vast acreage under surveillance, the security office is always a hive
of activity. Two to four officers per shift monitor two video walls, dispatching patrolmen
to disturbances, accidents and other incidents as needed. Embedded video motion detection on the cameras makes
it easier to spot trouble and dispatch
mobile patrols accordingly.
Though mobile patrols regularly
police the grounds, Rushing acknowledges
the importance of having cameras
in fixed locations to keep eyes on
a site once the patrol car has passed.
CoxHealth’s deployment demonstrates
the power of a security team working
with their video surveillance system to
do much more with the staff they have.
“We need to protect more than 2.3
million square feet of property around
the clock,” Rushing said. “We couldn’t
possibly hire enough people to cover all
the ground that the cameras do.”
Tracking Problems Around Parking Structures
To protect the new 780-car parking
garage, NetWatch installed 40 network
cameras throughout the gated facility.
Seven PTZ network cameras guard the
entrances and exits, and the remaining
30-plus cameras cover the parking bays
and ramps.
“We use the network cameras to
document the typical incidents that occur in a parking garage such as
thefts, fender-benders and break-ins,”
Rushing said. “We’ve also used the
cameras to track suspicious people
from hospital buildings to their vehicles
and vice versa.”
Because all the video streams to a
central monitoring station, CoxHealth
is able to piece together images from
multiple cameras to identify individuals
and verify a timeline for their inbuilding
activities.
The network cameras have been so
successful in the new parking garage
that CoxHealth requested that Net-
Watch network-enable the 64 analog
cameras in an older 580-car parking
garage across campus. There also
are plans to convert the analog cameras
currently deployed at several
parking lots scattered throughout the hospital’s property.
Focusing on Vulnerable Areas
At the CoxHealth Surgery Center, fixed
dome network cameras are trained
on building entrances, exits and walkways
to document slip-and-fall claims
and other incidents occurring outside
the building.
Inside the facility, NetWatch deployed
fixed dome network cameras to
monitor hallways, sensitive document
storage areas and medication dispensaries.
The cameras were particularly well
suited for the busy locations because
their unique design allowed for quick
installation in the hospital’s dropped
ceilings. Additionally, other cameras
are powered using one cable via PoE.
“Hospitals can be a target for narcotics theft,” Rushing said. “So
we’ve put cameras at a number of key
distribution points like medication cabinets,
medical disposal areas and our
pharmacy, where we know there’s a lot
of foot traffic.”
Because of this, the cameras watch
more than just people. NetWatch positioned
the cameras in such a way that
the exceptional video clarity can be
leveraged by security staff to compare
the dosage being entered on a computer
to the actual amount being dispensed.
The advanced H.264 compression used
by the M3011 cameras allows the hospital
to affordably archive three to four
weeks of video typically needed for internal
narcotics investigations.
Providing Crime-watch Support
While CoxHealth has seen a dramatic
drop in criminal activity on its grounds,
neighboring sites also have indirectly
benefited from the hospital’s surveillance
technology. Rushing recalls an incident
where a backhoe was stolen from
a construction site about a block away
from the hospital.
“Our cameras caught the whole
thing on video,” Rushing said. “The
images were so crisp that they not only
showed the backhoe being driven past
our property, but also the accomplice’s
vehicle following behind.”
CoxHealth shared the footage with
the local police, who were able to catch
and prosecute the perpetrators.
Around-the-clock video surveillance
is such an integral part of the Cox-
Health security program that, given
the choice, Rushing opts for installing
more cameras rather than beefing up
his security staff.
“As long as we have someone monitoring
the video, our team can do more
with a network camera than we can by
adding another person,” Rushing said.
Using Video Analytics to Direct Expansion
Hospital officials see the value in video
surveillance beyond hospital security.
The healthcare provider plans to use video
analytics to direct future expansion
and renovation of hospital facilities.
“Counting people and cars coming
and going on our property certainly
has value for security,” Rushing said.
“But the statistics we gather through
video surveillance also will help our
administrative board see what facilities
are being under-used and overused
so they can plan new projects
accordingly.”
The CoxHealth security team has
discovered that there are many ways
to derive benefits from deploying network
video. Leveraged as both an operational
and strategic planning tool,
video surveillance data offers realtime
insights that CoxHealth can use
to improve the safety and healthcare
services it provides to
the community.