AdventHealth, GE Healthcare open nation’s largest medical ‘Mission Control’
AdventHealth and GE Healthcare have announced the opening of the healthcare provider’s new “Mission Control” - the largest command center of its kind that makes clinical operations across the healthcare system as streamlined and efficient as possible. The 12,000-square-foot high-tech center is staffed 24 hours a day, seven days a week by a team of more than 50 nurses, EMS and flight dispatchers, transport techs and other specialists.
They say Mission Control will function like its NASA namesake, orchestrating patient care at all nine AdventHealth campuses in Orange, Seminole, and Osceola counties. Together, these hospitals handle more than 2 million patient visits per year.
They use artificial intelligence to inform and guide decision-making in areas including ambulance and helicopter dispatch, patient transfers between units and facilities, and prioritization of placement and treatment. Command-center technology has been shown to reduce wait times, expediting needed care.
“AdventHealth is at the leading edge in deploying this technology to help provide the best, most efficient care possible for our patients,” said Daryl Tol, president and CEO of AdventHealth’s Central Florida Division. “While the command center is invisible to patients, our team of experts will be there around the clock to make sure patients receive the care they need, quickly and safely.”
AdventHealth worked with GE Healthcare Partners to develop and implement the Mission Control technology on the Orlando campus. The command center features 60 monitors that continually display information such as near-time information such as patient bed status, as well as helicopter and ambulance status and movements. The technology can assist team members in all kinds of scenarios.