DocumentCode :
241446
Title :
Calculating a hospital´s IT Energy Efficiency and determining cost effective ways for improvement
Author :
Godbole, Nina S. ; Lamb, John
Author_Institution :
IBM India, Pune, India
fYear :
2014
fDate :
29-30 Oct. 2014
Firstpage :
1
Lastpage :
6
Abstract :
The environmental impact of the healthcare sector has become an important factor globally and is continuing to draw the attention of regulators. The energy use of the healthcare sector (whose largest sub-segment is `hospitals´) has been growing due to many factors. These factors include the rapid growth and adoption of Information and Communication Technology (ICT) in healthcare. The new IT technologies and applications used in healthcare include `cloud computing´, `mMedicine´, i.e. `mobility in Health´, eHealth, and tele(health) care for `remote delivery of healthcare services´. In general, the healthcare industry needs to reap the benefits of emerging technologies such as mobile computing and cloud computing, along with the use of Health Information Technology (HIT) to help solve the ever growing operating cost problems. One challenge facing the healthcare sector is how best to calculate the energy efficiency of this very complex sector. The work done over the past few years to analyze and create very energy efficient data centers presents an excellent opportunity for cost effective green IT at hospitals.Green IT is an ideal way for hospitals to make a significant step in the green direction for several reasons. First, IT is continually being refreshed at hospitals and most organizations as part of the need for the hospitals to keep vital technology up to date. That refresh cycle is similar to the refresh cycle for our company owned laptops, i.e. every three or four years. Any electronic waste (eWaste) from this refresh cycle must be recycled as part of a sustainability program. Replacing the IT equipment and upgrading the application architecture with energy efficient systems such as virtual servers, virtual data storage, and efficient application and database structures, can easily reduce IT power consumption for the replaced equipment by 50 percent. A second compelling reason to move to green IT is that virtual server and virtual data storage technology a- e methods that allow hospitals to reduce equipment and system management costs. Include private cloud computing for both your production and test / development systems, and the savings are even greater. So the latest green technology is based around a very solid business case without even considering the savings due to reduction in energy costs. This paper describes a process for calculating a hospital´s IT Energy Efficiency along with information on the best ways to improve energy efficiency in a cost effective manner. The process builds on the work done in other sectors (mainly data centers) in effectively measuring and improving IT energy efficiency.
Keywords :
cloud computing; health care; medical information systems; mobile computing; cloud computing; eHealth; electronic waste; energy efficient data center; environmental impact; green technology; health information technology; healthcare industry; healthcare sector; healthcare services; hospital IT energy efficiency; information and communication technology; mMedicine; mobile computing; mobility in health; telehealth care; virtual data storage technology; virtual server; Cooling; Energy efficiency; Green products; Hospitals; Organizations; Servers; HIT; carbon footprint; cloud computing; green IT; healthcare; mobile computing; protected health information;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Emerging Technologies for a Smarter World (CEWIT), 2014 11th International Conference & Expo on
Conference_Location :
Melville, NY
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/CEWIT.2014.7021144
Filename :
7021144
Link To Document :
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