New addition to the ABC series looking at how technology can aid
health care
This ABC focuses on how patient data, health knowledge, and
local service information are managed during the routine tasks that
make up clinical work. It looks at medical record keeping, how to
use the information that records contain for clinical, quality
improvement and research activities, how to use new media to
communicate with clinical colleagues and patients, and the
availability and uses of clinical knowledge resources.
After a short introduction to health informatics, each chapter
is organised around a typical patient scenario that illustrates
information dilemmas arising in clinical consultations. These case
studies help make the link between prescribing and treatment.
A final chapter considers the implications of informatics and
e Health for the future of the health professions and their work. It
also includes a glossary of health informatics terms.
Click on the sample chapter above for a look at what is health
information.
Spis treści
1 What is health information?.
2 Is a consultation needed?.
3 Why is this patient here today?.
4 How decision support tools help define clinical problems.
5 How computers can help to share understanding with
patients.
6 How informatics tools help deal with patients’
problems.
7 How computers help make efficient use of consultations.
8 Referral or follow-up?.
9 Keeping up: learning in the workplace.
10 Improving services with informatics tools.
11 Communication and navigation around the healthcare
system.
12 e Health and the future: promise or peril?.
Glossary.
Index
O autorze
Frank Sullivan, Community Health Sciences Division, Centre for
Health Informatics, University of Dundee, UK
Jeremy Wyatt, Centre for Health Informatics, University of
Dundee, UK