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LoginSaturday, February 04, 2012
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LifeTrac News
LifeTrac Deployed in Southwest Alabama Monday, September 14, 2009 (591 reads)
Twelve hospitals in seven south Alabama counties became part of a statewide trauma system that directs emergency workers to the most appropriate and available hospital emergency departments. This system utilizes LifeTrac for data communications.
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LifeTrac System Adds North Alabama Saturday, March 08, 2008 (564 reads)
The LifeTrac System in Central Alabama has expanded to support North Alabama, a next step in the creation of a satewide trauma system that state officials hope will become a national model for saving lives.
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Dell Features LifeTrac in Case Study Thursday, March 22, 2007 (974 reads)
Dell has released a case study featuring LifeTrac. The study focuses on the LifeTrac system used by BREMSS (Birmingham Regional Emergency Medical Services System), fifteen Birmingham-area hospitals and 2,400 emergency medical technicians.
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Forte' and BREMSS Win National Healthcare Innovation Award Thursday, February 08, 2007 (2309 reads)
Forte’ Incorporated, the developer of LifeTrac, and Birmingham Regional Emergency Medical Services System (BREMSS) today announced they have been jointly recognized as the winner of the 2007 MS-HUG (Microsoft Healthcare Users Group) Annual Innovation Awards in the category of Interoperability.
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BREMSS LifeTrac System Winner of Prestigious Homeland Security Award Tuesday, July 25, 2006 (2376 reads)
The Birmingham Regional Emergency Medical Services System was selected as the winner of the prestigious Mitretek Innovations Award in Homeland Security as announced on July 25, 2006 by Mitretek Systems and the Ash Institute for Democratic Governance and Innovation at Harvard’s prestigious John F. Kennedy School.
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LifeTrac In The News
Pandemic fears trouble already struggling ERs Monday, November 07, 2005 (816 reads)
Trauma centers and emergency departments are strained in many U.S. cities, experts say, and hospitals are ill-prepared to handle a disaster, The Associated Press reported Sunday. "Trauma systems are never more than a couple of minor incidents from being overwhelmed," said Larry Gage, president of the National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems.
But that’s not the case in Birmingham, where local emergency medical personnel say the Birmingham Regional Emergency Medical Services System makes this area much better prepared for a mass casualty incident disaster than many larger cities.
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