Security, STAT
Endless possibilities take medical center into the future
- By Kim Rahfaldt
- Aug 01, 2010
Since 1925, northern New Jersey has turned to Holy Name Medical Center
in Teaneck for healthcare excellence. While its patient volume and service
delivery have recently undergone extensive expansion, Holy Name Medical
Center employed an outdated and difficult-to-maintain security system that had
outlived its usefulness. Holy Name’s newly built Emergency Care Center and status
as a Medical Coordination Center for disaster preparedness helped drive the
funding needed to invest in a new security management system. Hospital officials
chose AMAG Technology’s Symmetry Security Management System with Symmetry
Video. This offered Holy Name access control, video and alarm monitoring
on one platform.
An important requirement of the new system was the ability to integrate with
systems already in place. Symmetry integrates with the existing time and attendance
system, and employees now use the same badge for access control and time
and attendance. It also integrates with HNMC’s Human Resources PeopleSoft
software, which simplified the employee registration process because personnel
data is only entered once into the PeopleSoft system.
“When they register an employee in PeopleSoft, that person is enrolled in the
time and attendance software and Symmetry system,” said David George, installing
integrator at Engineered Security Systems Inc. “They print the badge, and they
are done. That was a key feature they wanted in the system.”
Planning for the Future, Now
In addition to the main campus location, an administrative building, a fitness center
located in a nearby town and the soon-to-open Villa Marie Claire hospice are
all protected by Symmetry SMS. ESS and Holy Name’s IT department studied
how the camera resolution would stream via the network and determined how
much bandwidth was truly necessary to produce the video quality Holy Name
required. ESS recommended making use of an existing fiber network that was not
currently being used. The separate network provides plenty of room for the rapid
growth anticipated by HNMC.
“One of the biggest problems we see is that companies don’t perform the proper
calculations and place anything on their existing network,” said Ken Whelan, ESS’
engineer. “Since the original design, Holy Name has almost doubled the number
of cards and cameras. That would have overloaded the system and been a disaster
if it wasn’t on a separate network.”
ESS originally designed a futureproof system, so as more components were
added, the network was not affected. For example, a recently added video server
didn’t affect the system at all. ESS also encouraged Holy Name to purchase more
camera licenses than the original system design recommended.
Everyday Security
Approximately 160 cameras monitor main doors, corridors, elevators, intersections,
the behavioral health unit and the facilities management area. PTZ cameras
scan the ER and parking lots.
“If we have an incident, we pull up the camera in the virtual matrix and review
the video,” said Jerry Conway, Holy Name Medical Center’s security manager.
“We may not be viewing cameras every minute of the day, but we can always look
back and track someone. The more cameras we install, the easier it is to do that.”
Nearly 40 security officers rotate shifts to man the command center 24 hours
a day. The security command center is located adjacent to the emergency department
and contains four 42-inch LCD screens on the wall. Camera images stream
to three screens, and alarms are displayed on the fourth screen. Two workstations
with 20-inch screens monitor control points and assist with badge production.
Security officers also can access the system at remote stations throughout the
medical center. The remote stations allow the officers to view activity instantaneously
and respond quickly to alarms. The officers appreciate the user friendliness of the system when performing functions
such as opening doors remotely
and retrieving archived video.
Unique Benefits
As an Medical Coordination Center,
Holy Name shares information about
hospitals, nursing homes, assisted living
facilities, health departments and
EMS agencies with other local hospitals
and the state. Mutualink, a Web-based
interoperability system, allows
Holy Name to share radio channels
and video systems with the eight other
MCC hospitals. In the event of a
large-scale emergency, video of Holy
Name’s Emergency Department or
lobby can be sent electronically to the
state for review and analysis over the
Mutualink network.
“As an MCC, Holy Name can provide
information about the health side
of a disaster,” said Chuck Gerity, Holy
Name’s assistant vice president of
emergency preparedness. “Symmetry is
another source to provide information
through the MCC to the state.”
Holy Name had planned on purchasing
a separate guard tour system
for its security officers. With 160 camera
views streaming into the video’s virtual
matrix, the security officers could
see everything necessary to perform
their jobs effectively. Symmetry provided
camera control, and the officers
controlled what the cameras viewed.
A quick-view feature has provided
Holy Name’s security officers with information
to determine the cause of
alarms. A tab on the monitoring screen
allows an officer to take a retroactive
look at what caused an alarm.
The Future is Here
Once Holy Name Medical Center fully
understood the system’s capabilities,
planning for the future began immediately.
Holy Name is planning to interface
its visitor parking lot’s cashier system,
creating a system that will control
who enters and leaves the parking lot.
Contractors and temporary staff will be
given cards with an expiration date and
will be allowed to park in the visitor lot
until their card expires. The cards also
will count the number of cars in the lot
and help manage traffic flow.
The Threat Level Manager module
has been installed and soon will
be integrated with Holy Name’s infant
protection system via alarm points. In
the event of an emergency, Symmetry
TLM will instantly lock down the
LDRP unit so only security officers can
move around the floor.
“Threat Level Manager allows us
great flexibility,” Gerity said. “We plan
to use as many features as we can. The
robustness of the system is one of the
reasons we chose it.”
The medical center has already started
to reassess its facility, as well as the
system’s capabilities. They’ve received
federal funding and are reapplying for
a grant to fine-tune high-priority areas,
such as the ventilation system, facilities
management areas and
critical infrastructure
within the complex.