The University of Kansas Hospital built its Cambridge Tower A in order to handle the expected 30 percent increase of overall inpatient volume by 2020. This is the hospital's largest expansion, coming in at $360 million.
The growing volume and demand for inpatient care drove the hospital to seek out partners for an updated technology solution. Kansas City-based FORTÉ worked with the hospital system to fully service many of the demands of the expansion.
Prior to partnering with FORTÉ, the University of Kansas Hospital staff constantly battled with fractured and inconsistent audiovisual systems that often hindered them from doing their jobs.
The hospital's process for integrating new technology usually involved multiple different vendors, which brought various kinds of devices and concepts. In turn, it left many departments working with totally different solutions than others.
As frustration with this process mounted, staff at the hospital approached FORTÉ about outfitting a boardroom because of the way FORTÉ handles projects from start to finish.
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FORTÉ took a comprehensive approach to partnership with the hospital, its teams, and outside contractors. FORTÉ also worked with physicians in the radiology department to develop a technical standard for Medical Image Reading Rooms.
By meeting with doctors and other medical staff throughout the project to understand their needs and goals for the space, FORTÉ was able to design and integrate a solution that would meet their specific criteria. That same practice was implemented throughout the entire project. FORTÉ worked with the vendors and manufacturers to ensure whatever solutions went into the space, they would work for the end users without a doubt.
Outside of digital signage and the medical image reading rooms, the project included: