1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910463632103321

Titolo

Driving quality in informatics : fulfilling the promise / / edited by Karen Courtney, Alex Kuo and Omid Shabestari

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Washington, District of Columbia : , : IOS Press, , [2015]

©2015

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (392 p.)

Collana

Studies in health technology and informatics ; ; volume 208

Disciplina

362.1/068

Soggetti

Computer science

Electronic books.

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Description based upon print version of record.

Nota di contenuto

""Title Page""; ""Preface""; ""ITCH 2015 Steering Committee""; ""ITCH 2015 Scientific Review Committee""; ""Contents""; ""The Impact of University Provided Nurse Electronic Medical Record Training on Health Care Organizations: An Exploratory Simulation Approach""; ""The Importance of Telehealth for Directors and Other Decision Makers""; ""Using a Digital Marketing Platform for the Promotion of an Internet Based Health Encyclopedia in Saudi Arabia""; ""A Pharmacy Inventory Management System in Saudi Arabia: A Case Study""

""The Implementation Experiences of a Pharmacy Automation Drug Dispensing System in Saudi Arabia""""Project ALIVE: An Action-Research Exploration of EMR Value in Primary Care""; ""Nurses: Extending Care Through Telehealth""; ""Using Community Based Participatory Research as a Method for Investigating Electronic Health Records""; ""Bridging a Divide: Architecture for a Joint Hospital-Primary Care Data Warehouse""; ""Supporting Dementia in the Community: A Human Factors Perspective""; ""Patient Narratives Representing Patient Voices to Inform Research: A Pilot Qualitative Study""

""Awareness of Technology-Induced Errors and Processes for Identifying and Preventing Such Errors""""Designing Electronic Medication Reconciliation for Patients: The Lead User Method""; ""Patient Perspectives on Patient Participation - Results from a Workshop with a Patient Council in a General Practice""; ""Danish



Citizens' Expectations to the Use of eHealth""; ""Development of a Flexible and Extensible Computer-Based Simulation Platform for Healthcare Students""; ""Integration of Electronic Health Records into Nursing Education: Issues, Challenges and Limitations""

""Know Me - A Journey in Creating a Personal Electronic Health Record""""Integrating Clinical Decision Support into EMR and PHR: A Case Study Using Anticoagulation""; ""Patient Access to Their Health Record Using Open Source EHR""; ""Usability Testing of a Prototype Multi-User Telehealth Kiosk""; ""Trialling an Electronic Decision Aid for Policy Developers to Support Ageing Well""; ""Beyond Effectiveness: A Pragmatic Evaluation Framework for Learning and Continuous Quality Improvement of e-Learning Interventions in Healthcare""

""SmartMed: A Medication Management System to Improve Adherence""""Health Informatics-Enabled Workflow Redesign and Evaluation""; ""Using Heart Rate Variability for Automated Identification of Exercise Exertion Levels""; ""A Platform to Collect Structured Data from Multiple EMRs""; ""The Role of Technology in Reducing Unnecessary Duplicate Diagnostic Imaging Examinations""; ""Building an Electronic Handover Tool for Physicians Using a Collaborative Approach Between Clinicians and the Development Team""; ""Modelling Clinical Diagnostic Errors: A System Dynamics Approach""

""Valuing National Effects of Digital Health Investments: An Applied Method""

Sommario/riassunto

Although the data in healthcare comes from and relates to patients, it has generally been the clinician and not the patient who has been seen as the end-user of health information or health information technology. This seems set to change though, as the evolution of new online tools and mobile applications has led to the growth of a grass-roots effort from patients to change their role and involvement in their own health management.This book presents papers from the Information Technology and Communications in Health conference, ITCH 2015, held in Victoria, Canada, in February 2015. The theme