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4.
Stud Health Technol Inform ; 201: 380-7, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24943570

ABSTRACT

Health care organizations have long been limited to a small number of major vendors in their selection of an electronic health record (EHR) system in the national and international marketplace. These major EHR vendors have in common base systems that are decades old, are built in antiquated programming languages, use outdated server architecture, and are based on inflexible data models [1,2]. The option to upgrade their technology to keep pace with the power of new web-based architecture, programming tools and cloud servers is not easily undertaken due to large client bases, development costs and risk [3]. This paper presents the decade-long efforts of a large national provider of home health and hospice care to select an EHR product, failing that to build their own and failing that initiative to go back into the market in 2012. The decade time delay had allowed new technologies and more nimble vendors to enter the market. Partnering with a new start-up company doing web and cloud based architecture for the home health and hospice market, made it possible to build, test and implement an operational and point of care system in 264 home health locations across 40 states and three time zones in the United States. This option of "starting over" with the new web and cloud technologies may be posing a next generation of new EHR vendors that retells the Blackberry replacement by iPhone story in healthcare.


Subject(s)
Electronic Health Records/organization & administration , Home Care Agencies/organization & administration , Hospice Care/organization & administration , Information Storage and Retrieval/methods , Internet/organization & administration , Needs Assessment/organization & administration , Software , Georgia , Marketing of Health Services/organization & administration , Organizational Objectives
5.
J Am Med Inform Assoc ; 20(1): 134-40, 2013 Jan 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22962195

ABSTRACT

Much of what is currently documented in the electronic health record is in response toincreasingly complex and prescriptive medicolegal, reimbursement, and regulatory requirements. These requirements often result in redundant data capture and cumbersome documentation processes. AMIA's 2011 Health Policy Meeting examined key issues in this arena and envisioned changes to help move toward an ideal future state of clinical data capture and documentation. The consensus of the meeting was that, in the move to a technology-enabled healthcare environment, the main purpose of documentation should be to support patient care and improved outcomes for individuals and populations and that documentation for other purposes should be generated as a byproduct of care delivery. This paper summarizes meeting deliberations, and highlights policy recommendations and research priorities. The authors recommend development of a national strategy to review and amend public policies to better support technology-enabled data capture and documentation practices.


Subject(s)
Documentation , Electronic Health Records/organization & administration , Information Storage and Retrieval , Public Policy , Quality Assurance, Health Care , Continuity of Patient Care , Documentation/trends , Efficiency, Organizational , Electronic Health Records/trends , Guidelines as Topic , Humans , Information Dissemination , Information Storage and Retrieval/trends , Research , United States , Workflow
6.
J Am Med Inform Assoc ; 14(1): 19-24, 2007.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17068358

ABSTRACT

As new directions and priorities emerge in health care, nursing informatics leaders must prepare to guide the profession appropriately. To use an analogy, where a road bends or changes directions, guideposts indicate how drivers can stay on course. The AMIA Nursing Informatics Working Group (NIWG) produced this white paper as the product of a meeting convened: 1) to describe anticipated nationwide changes in demographics, health care quality, and health care informatics; 2) to assess the potential impact of genomic medicine and of new threats to society; 3) to align AMIA NIWG resources with emerging priorities; and 4) to identify guideposts in the form of an agenda to keep the NIWG on course in light of new opportunities. The anticipated societal changes provide opportunities for nursing informatics. Resources described below within the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and the National Committee for Health and Vital Statistics (NCVHS) can help to align AMIA NIWG with emerging priorities. The guideposts consist of priority areas for action in informatics, nursing education, and research. Nursing informatics professionals will collaborate as full participants in local, national, and international efforts related to the guideposts in order to make significant contributions that empower patients and providers for safer health care.


Subject(s)
Forecasting , Nursing Informatics/trends , Nursing Research/trends , Goals , Nursing Informatics/education , Nursing Informatics/organization & administration , Societies, Medical , United States
7.
Int J Med Inform ; 74(11-12): 989-99, 2005 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16084124

ABSTRACT

The rise of evidence-base practice (EBP) as a standard for care delivery is rapidly emerging as a global phenomenon that is transcending political, economic and geographic boundaries. Evidence-based nursing (EBN) addresses the growing body of nursing knowledge supported by different levels of evidence for best practices in nursing care. Across all health care, including nursing, we face the challenge of how to most effectively close the gap between what is known and what is practiced. There is extensive literature on the barriers and difficulties of translating research findings into practical application. While the literature refers to this challenge as the "Bench to Bedside" lag, this paper presents three collaborative strategies that aim to minimize this gap. The Bedside strategy proposes to use the data generated from care delivery and captured in the massive data repositories of electronic health record (EHR) systems as empirical evidence that can be analysed to discover and then inform best practice. In the Classroom strategy, we present a description for how evidence-based nursing knowledge is taught in a baccalaureate nursing program. And finally, the Bench strategy describes applied informatics in converting paper-based EBN protocols into the workflow of clinical information systems. Protocols are translated into reference and executable knowledge with the goal of placing the latest scientific knowledge at the fingertips of front line clinicians. In all three strategies, information technology (IT) is presented as the underlying tool that makes this rapid translation of nursing knowledge into practice and education feasible.


Subject(s)
Cooperative Behavior , Education, Nursing/methods , Evidence-Based Medicine/methods , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , Nursing Informatics/methods , Nursing Process/organization & administration , Teaching/methods , Education, Nursing/organization & administration , Evidence-Based Medicine/organization & administration , Nursing Informatics/organization & administration , Teaching/organization & administration , United States
8.
Semin Nurse Manag ; 10(2): 117-9, 2002 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12092265

ABSTRACT

Executive positions in corporate America offer nurse leaders the opportunity to influence product development and services delivered to ensure that the best possible solutions are provided to health care organizations, providers, and patients. This opportunity to "make a difference" is a critical component for nurses' attraction to migrating to the business side of the health care industry. However, making the transition from leadership positions in health care delivery organizations to corporate businesses carries big challenges. A major demand is for nurse leaders to adjust from direct span of control organizational models to matrix management structures used in complex business organizations.


Subject(s)
Commerce/organization & administration , Health Care Sector/organization & administration , Nurse Administrators/organization & administration , Organizational Culture , Power, Psychological , Altruism , Decision Making, Organizational , Ethics, Nursing , Humans , Leadership , Models, Nursing , Models, Organizational , Nurse's Role , Philosophy, Nursing , United States
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