Smart patient room technology promises better care, smoother workflows, and improved outcomes. Too often, hospitals stumble, not because the technology is flawed, but because the strategy is. Here are the top 10 mistakes I’ve seen firsthand, and how to avoid them.
Hospitals often buy screens, sensors, or platforms without mapping clinical workflows first. This leads to tools that staff don’t use or that increase workload rather than reduce it.
Smart room design is frequently added after the final project drawings. Late-stage changes lead to:
Each vendor recommends the solution they sell, not what the hospital actually needs. Hospitals end up with:
A typical mistake:
Without integration planning, hospitals create inefficient silos that frustrate staff.
IT and Facilities often lead the project, but nursing and clinical teams carry the operational burden. When clinical staff aren’t included upfront:
Hospitals often lack standardized:
Without standards, every new project becomes a custom build.
Hospitals frequently assume systems will “just plug into Epic.”
Common challenges:
Each of these can cause issues and delays that can last months.
Smart room projects often fail not because the technology is bad, but because:
Hospitals underestimate how much support nurses need for new tech.
Hospitals often don’t manage questions like:
Without a sustainability plan, systems quickly fall into disuse.
The biggest mistake: trying to “do everything at once.”
Successful hospitals follow a phased approach:
A carefully planned roadmap ensures funding aligns with strategy.
Conclusion
Hospitals invest heavily in smart room technology, but without a structured approach, projects miss the mark. Avoiding these common mistakes can save time, reduce cost, and create better outcomes for both patients and staff.