I think what I would do is, instruct everyone to power down their computers & laptops at the close of business. Then I would ask the IT dept to come over after hours and check your system. You can't very well have your entire doctors office shut down off the internet during the day, but at night you can.
Correct. There is no way we could shut anyone down from 7:30 am to 5:30 pm.
In this way the IT dept can check simply the access points with nobody on the network, as mentioned they will probably start with the router.
Sadly, I have no faith in our IT department and honestly doubt that they will do anything at all unless 1) 16 Mbps is, in fact, unreasonably slow (it sure seems that way to me) and 2) I complain to much higher management if 16 Mbps is in fact too slow.
There is a lot of junk cable from China being used. Your access points should be hard wired back to the router.
I remember when it was installed but couldn't tell you anything about it. Each office and exam room is also hard wired.
Ask the IT guys to examine the cables being used in your office for markings of the manufacturer.
I will. But they will laugh at me, if not to my face, definitely behind my back. As mentioned, for as long as I remember they have never fixed _anything_. Management said they were going to fire one of them a year ago because of complaints from all over the region. But he's still the main guy.
A 25 person doctors office is not that large square footage wise
It is actually huge. Two stories, something like 9000 square feet. We used to have 9 doctors in here and 50 employees. We were devastated by the ACA. Now you can't hire a primary care doctor anywhere. Anyway, the size could actually be a problem. Large closets upstairs and downstairs with all the lines,routers, etc etc.
Best of luck to you and don't give up! It's to annoying to have slow internet, I bet you can work this and get it resolved.
Thank you and everyone else for helping out. I'm going to push management hard on this. The EHR (in general) is an inefficient way to do medicine at this point. My volume has contracted considerably since they were mandated by the ACA and seeing fewer patients does not equate to spending more time with them since that time is monopolized by data entry. The net result is less access to care (volume=access!), less time with patients, epidemic levels of physician burn-out and falling income. When you make any worker do less work he likes to do, more meaningless work he does not like to do and pay him less you have a problem. And around here primary care physicians are leaving medicine. Sorry about the rant, but my point is, a slow EHR is an even greater frustration. If I could get some real internet speed with this new EHR, which is a huge step in the right direction, my job will be much more pleasant and patient care much more efficient and appropriate.