Secure & Reliable Report Distribution

NetDelivery with Distribution Wizard

Secure, Accurate Delivery of Patient Information

request a demoNetDelivery with Distribution Wizard allows you to securely distribute reports from your healthcare information system (HCIS) to multiple recipients and locations via fax, encrypted print stream, encrypted file or email. NetDelivery with Distribution Wizard is integrated with the HCIS’s faxing functions, but allows you to define (by recipient/user and location) whether to send the data as a fax, a file, an email or directly to a printer.

Because it enables the secure delivery and exchange of key clinical data, NetDelivery with Distribution Wizard helps comply with HIPAA regulations and assists with establishing “Meaningful Use” of electronic health information, as required by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA).

Features & Benefits

  • Integrate seamlessly with your HCIS’s faxing routines to enable secure report distribution from your HCIS via fax or encrypted data stream over the Internet.
  • Remote locations connect virtual printers via the Internet, retrieving data from your HCIS on demand, on schedule, or in real-time.
  • Reports can be distributed in PRN, TIF or PDF formats to simplify the review and printing process for users.
  • A report link can be sent via email to eliminate the need for client software, ensure a full audit trail, and guarantee secure delivery using encryption.
  • User connections to the reports are validated and all data sent via the Internet is encrypted using 128-bit SSL encryption, ensuring HIPAA-compliant report delivery.

To get more information, download the NetDelivery with Distribution Wizard product brief or contact us to see how our HIPAA-compliant report distribution products can help you reduce costs and increase productivity.

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Testimonials

NetSafe is a key component of our disaster recovery – business continuity plan. We are on the verge of going live with a re-implementation of NUR. We will be nearly paperless within a couple of months, so our clinical analysts have been setting up a whole process for making sure that we’ll have any critical patient data available in the event of a MEDITCH outage. We’ve had the MARs sent to a PC in the Pharmacy for quite a while now.

G. Fred Shepard
Systems Administrator
The Charlotte Hungerford Hospital