Optimation has worked with MCNZ to design, develop and implement MedSys, its core system for handling doctor registration and on-going certification. By automating many business processes and providing important monitoring functionality, MedSys helps improve efficiency while ensuring legal compliance and auditability. It also enables MCNZ to deliver a growing range of services over the web.
Health: Application development, Web-enabled business, Managed services
The MedSys system comprises a central registration database that manages all elements of registration, competence, health and conduct for each individual doctor, and a workflow engine that guides users through business rules-based processes. The system is fully integrated with MCNZ's existing electronic document and records management system.
"MedSys is designed to be intuitive for our users, and to guide them through processes step-by-step. It is based around workflows rather than being simply a data recording system, and as we continue to develop it we will become more efficient and productive. It also reduces our business risk and ensures we meet legal compliance requirements," explains Medical Council CEO Philip Pigou.
"The software components and the workflow engine have been designed with a lot of in-built flexibility, so we can amend workflows and processes to adapt to future changes in our business, such as new legislation or policies."
Planning for the MedSys project kicked off in 2006, and more than three years' work has gone into design, software architecture, software development, on-going testing, and the data analysis and migration strategy.
"Optimation worked closely with us throughout the entire development process, which meant they developed a comprehensive understanding of our business requirements and how we worked," says Pigou. "A key part of the overall strategy has been to test, measure and check that deliverables matched our business needs and specified outcomes at every stage, and that has been critical to the overall success of the project."
Download a case study on the Medical Council (PDF, 120Kb).
Read Computerworld's interview with Philip Pigou.


