Health Technologies

How Are Healthcare Organizations Approaching 5G?

Reduced data latency and higher transmission speeds are both on the docket for Houston Methodist when it opens its newest hospital in April 2025. The health system is working with AT&T and Verizon to bring 5G to the facility, says Jim Francis, CTO and vice president of IT at Houston Methodist.

“What we’re doing with 5G is really about spectrum modernization,” Francis says. “We’ll have the public 5G that anyone can use, but then we’ll tie into that with private 5G as well as Wi-Fi 6 and our Citizens Broadband Radio Service band.”

To support the technology, Houston Methodist has installed a distributed antenna system that will amplify the wireless signal across the entire hospital campus. The 104-acre site will include recreational amenities such as walking trails and sports fields, so it’s important to ensure that clinicians on break are easy to reach in emergency situations, he adds.

Francis says that he envisions situations where enhanced wireless communications might play a critical role in care provided outside the hospital’s walls. In the event of a major accident on a nearby highway, for example, a care team might use a 5G-enabled van to connect to the EHR as soon as it starts the triage process.

“The flexibility it’s going to give us is exciting to think about,” he says. “There’s a lot you can do as a healthcare organization when you have that kind of connectivity.”

EXPLORE: Healthcare leaders share how smart hospitals use technology to transform patient care.

The ‘Promise’ of Seamless Connectivity in Healthcare

Another healthcare leader with 5G on his mind is Aaron Miri, chief digital and information officer at Baptist Health in Jacksonville, Fla.

Miri describes 5G as having “tremendous promise” for the healthcare industry, and points to Europe and Japan as examples of what’s in store for the U.S.

“In countries where they’ve invested heavily in wireless infrastructure, they’re years ahead of us,” Miri says. “You see the instantaneous access to information, the application and availability of multimedia and large file downloads. Being able to leverage that, it’s beyond anything we can do today.”

Baptist Health doesn’t currently have 5G, but Miri says that the organization is evaluating its options. The health system serves a vast area, and many of its patients live in rural communities that don’t have access to broadband.

“Could 5G help us get to those patients?” he asks. “Could it help us engage our patients in a dynamic way, with conversations and data sharing, on their personal devices? That’s our hope, but we don’t know yet. In our case, we’re not there.”

What he does know for certain, Miri says, is that in areas where 5G becomes a reality, healthcare is going to change for the better: “5G will unlock the promise of medicine so that providers will be able to deliver care at the right place and when patients need it most.”

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