Nursing Informatics
Nursing Informatics
Nursing Informatics
The worlds of health care, communication, and information
technologies are ever evolving, separately and together. As nurses in
the the community expand thier practice definition to embrace new
information technologies, opportunities for improved health care to
populations seem endless. This evolution is seen as a merger of health
care technology with information and communications technology,
fostering the design and implementation of health care management
information systems in a variety of clinical practice settings.the clinical
practice settings involved in this new technology include both the
acute care and community-based practice environments. Organizations
such as hospitals and community-based agencies such as public health
departements and home agencies use information and
communications technologies to collect, restore, retrieve, analyze, and
present client care data in the care delivery settings. Health care
continues to be a human endeavor that is necessarily complex in
nature. Decisions related to client care continue to increase in
complexity, with the need for rapid, accurate information for clinical
decisions making as a priority for effective care.
Nurses have been delivering compassionate care using
technology since the time of Florence Nightingale. Technology, coined
from the Greek language ³tekhnolohiga´ meaning systematic
treatment, is defined as a scientific method of achieving a practical
purpose. As healthcare evolves to meet the needs of mankind, nurses
are faced with greater challenges on how to apply technology in
practice, education, and research. Now more than ever, the term
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1980s ± Health Informatics loosely practiced
½Y àiomedical Informatics is practiced in the Philippines
½Y Îord processors to capture patient information
½Y Data àase Management Systems
1990s ± Medical Informatics
PMIS
MIU
1980s ± 2009
Nursing Informatics is loosely practiced in the Phil
March 2010 ± PHILIPPINE NURSES INFORMATICS
ASSOCIATION
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The nursing process is the core of patient care delivery. In the
nursing process continuum, nurses are constantly faced with data and
information. Data and information are integrated in each step of the
nursing process:
*Y assessment
*Y diagnosis,
*Y planning,
*Y implementation, and
*Y evaluation
Nursing documentation, which is often identified as the sixth
step in the nursing process, is vital in information management.
Therefore, it is necessary for nurses to document accurately and
precisely to determine the desired outcome. Remember the Rule
³Garbage In±Garbage Out´ also applies to nursing documentation.
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Every nurse is an informaticist. Îhen information is well
managed, patient outcomes are favorable. The Nursing Informatics
Task Force of HIMSS identified the following value of the nursing
informaticist:
1) supports nursing work processes using technology,
2) increases the accuracy and completeness of nursing
documentation,
3) improves nursing workflow by streamlining and eliminating
redundancy in documentation,
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The emergence of the specialty known as nursing informatics is
not a recent phenomenon. That nurses have been using computers
since the 1950s and emerged as an advanced specialty in the 1980s.
According to Graves and CorcoranYdevised a conceptual framework
describes the relationship among computer science, information
systems science, and nursing science.
The framework for nursing informatics relies on the central
concepts of data, information and knowledge:
½Y { is defined as discrete entities that are described objectively
without interpretation
½Y a a as data that is interpreted, organized or structured
½Y ^ { as information that has been synthesized so that
interrelationships are identified and formalized.
½Y Resulting in decisions that guide practice
The anageent and processing coponents may be
considered the functional components of informatics.
Example:
The collection of individual data element "Raw Data" the
transition of raw data to knowledge is a three-phased process.
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Many of these benefits have came about with the development
of the a{a {, which is the electronic version of
the client data found in the traditional paper record.
EMR benefits include:
Vproved access to the edical record. The EMR can be
accessed from several different locations simultaneously, as well as by
different levels of providers.
Decreased redundancy of data entry. For example, allergies and
vital signs need only be entered once.
Decreased tie spent in docuentation. Automation allows
direct entry from monitoring equipment, as well as point-of-care data
entry.
Vncreased tie for client care. More time is available for client
care because less time is required for documentation and transcription
of physician orders.
Facilitation of data collection for research. Electronically stored
client records provide quick access to clinical data for a large number
of clients.
Vproved counication and decreased potential for error.
Improved legibility of clinician documentation and orders is seen with
computerized information systems.
Creation of a lifetie clinical record facilitated by inforation
systes.
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Networks:
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the client, accesses a patient record on the floor from a server, which
stores the patient record.
Types of Networks: They range from small (home network) to very
large (Internet)
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A collection of programs that manage all of the computer's
activities, including the control of hardware, execution of software, and
management of information.
uper user: This person has additional experience over the average
employee and serves as a local resource person. In the hospital setting
this is user who know the clinical area and the computer system.
picrocoputer pecialist: Provides PC information and training; has
special training and degree in computer science or a related area.
Analyst: They are frequently clinicians, who become involved in
system selection and training. Many have learned their role on the job
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References: