|
Showing 1 - 2 of
2 matches in All Departments
Health institutions are investing in and fielding information
technology solutions at an unprecedented pace. With the
recommendations from the Institute of Medicine around information
technology solutions for patient safety, mandates from industry
groups such as Leapfrog about using infor mation systems to improve
health care, and the move toward evidence based practice, health
institutions cannot afford to retain manual practices. The
installation of multi-million dollar computerized health systems
repre sents the very life blood of contemporary clinical operations
and a crucial link to the financial viability of institutions. Yet,
the implementation of health information systems is exceptionally
complex, expensive and often just plain messy. The need for
improvement in the art and science of systems implemen tation is
clear: up to 70-80% of information technology installations fail.
The reasons are multi-faceted, ranging from the complexity of the
diverse workflows being computerized, the intricate nature of
health organizations, the knowledge and skills of users to other
reasons such as strategies for obtaining key executive support,
weaving through the politics peculiar to the institution, and
technical facets including the usability of systems. Thus, the art
and science of successfully implementing systems remains deeply
layered in elusiveness. Still, given the pervasiveness of system
implementa tions and the importance of the outcomes, this is a
critical topic, especially for nurses and informatics nurse
specialists."
Health institutions are investing in and fielding information
technology solutions at an unprecedented pace. With the
recommendations from the Institute of Medicine around information
technology solutions for patient safety, mandates from industry
groups such as Leapfrog about using infor mation systems to improve
health care, and the move toward evidence based practice, health
institutions cannot afford to retain manual practices. The
installation of multi-million dollar computerized health systems
repre sents the very life blood of contemporary clinical operations
and a crucial link to the financial viability of institutions. Yet,
the implementation of health information systems is exceptionally
complex, expensive and often just plain messy. The need for
improvement in the art and science of systems implemen tation is
clear: up to 70-80% of information technology installations fail.
The reasons are multi-faceted, ranging from the complexity of the
diverse workflows being computerized, the intricate nature of
health organizations, the knowledge and skills of users to other
reasons such as strategies for obtaining key executive support,
weaving through the politics peculiar to the institution, and
technical facets including the usability of systems. Thus, the art
and science of successfully implementing systems remains deeply
layered in elusiveness. Still, given the pervasiveness of system
implementa tions and the importance of the outcomes, this is a
critical topic, especially for nurses and informatics nurse
specialists."
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R164
Discovery Miles 1 640
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R164
Discovery Miles 1 640
|