Interoperability: Smart IT Systems Working Together
4 free nursing contact hours from http://www.nurse.com and the University of Phoenix.
Showing posts with label Informatics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Informatics. Show all posts
Monday, May 9, 2016
Thursday, May 5, 2016
National Nurses Week 5/6/2016 - 5/12/2016
Some excellent education offerings from HIMSS in honor of National Nurses Week!
http://www.himss.org/national-nurses-week
http://www.himss.org/national-nurses-week
Sunday, April 10, 2016
Hospital Password Security
Healthcare providers are notorious for creating weak passwords and I know there is a significant amount of recreational web surfing using institutional computers. Trying to convince users to create "real" passwords and engage is safe computing can be tough. Perhaps these stories should be part of every newcomer orientation.
Thursday, April 7, 2016
Measuring blood sugar from tears
http://medicalfuturist.com/2016/04/07/googles-amazing-digital-contact-lens-can-transform-diabetes-care/
Google developed a digital contact lens which will monitor blood sugar levels and transmit data to an external application.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_Contact_Lens
Google developed a digital contact lens which will monitor blood sugar levels and transmit data to an external application.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_Contact_Lens
Wednesday, June 25, 2008
Thinking about Informatics Competency
I listened to an interview posted by CHCF at: http://www.ihealthbeat.org/articles/2008/6/23/Efforts-Aim-To-Increase-Health-Care-IT-Informatics-in-US-Nurse-Training-Programs.aspx?av=1&topicID=54 entitled "Efforts Aim To Increase Health Care IT, Informatics in U.S. Nurse Training Programs". It featured comments from Connie Delaney, (University of Minnesota), Beverly Malone, (NLN) and Joyce Sensmeier, (HIMSS).
From the website: "The National League for Nursing says schools and colleges need to incorporate more IT training into their curricula. It's not enough just to train nurses in basic computer skills, nurses also need to be proficient in how health care IT works and be able to use the technology to its best advantage, the league contends."
I reviewed the presentations by Joyce Sensemeir, Carol Gassert and Mary Anne Rizzolo at the Rutgers Conference and it got me thinking a bit more about the whole issue of nurses and informatics competencies.
Multiple sources point to a need for “informatics training” but how can we make the definition mean something to the bedside nurse or unit level manager? “The intersection of nursing science, information science and cognitive science” is a wonderful phrase but still seems distant from practice. Some people describe computer literacy is informatics, some focus on the electronic health record; others concentrate on the electronic tools used to capture data. At one level it’s a matter of functional competency – how do I enter/retrieve data from a record or how do I create a spreadsheet. At another level it is about how to use technology to make sense out of data, how to seek technologies that will enable them to work, communicate and collaborate more efficiently.
I think we need examples relevant to nurses, students and faculty other than using PDAs as a mobile library and how to enter/retrieve data from an EMR. I see informatics as about collecting, storing and retrieving data; interpreting data to become information, and applying information as knowledge not only to patient care but also personal and professional development.
It seems that in the IS world we give our clients lots of wonderful tools. Office applications, Internet access, project management software, and hardware of all sorts are pretty much everywhere. The big disconnect I see is our customers often don’t know how to use these tools beyond a very elementary level. Many still use yellow legal pads to collect data, then enter it into a spreadsheet or database. Once it’s there they may still resort to manually counting because they don’t know how to use formulas and sorting. PowerPoint presentations get too big to email because they have added high resolution photographs and resized them to display a fraction of the original dimensions but did not compress the images or change the file size. Using RSS feeds to keep abreast of news and publications is a totally new concept to many.
It reminds me of the story about a hardware salesman who sold chain saw to a customer who wanted to cut firewood. After a month the customer brought the saw back to the shop and said the new saw made life harder than ever before. The salesman looked at the saw, started it up, and the customer said “What’s that noise?”.
Today I met with the director of the Staff Development Office and we chatted about a series of workshops on practical informatics (I call it guerilla informatics). The plan is to meet with a group of staff educators to brainstorm the need for short, practical modules directed at nurse managers with the goal they will become the champions of the concept who spread it to their staff. I can see modules on using spreadsheets, presentation software and databases to collect, analyze and display information. I can see modules on how to use CINAHL and PubMed effectively as well as other sessions on using electronic tools to collaborate, educate and create personal learning environments that draw on information from multiple sources.
Two sources to gauge informatics competency
Results of aA Delphi Study to Determine Informatics Competencies for Nurses
at Four Levels of Practice
Nancy Staggers, PhD, RN, FAAN
Carole A. Gassert, PhD, RN, FAAN, FACMI
http://www.nurs.utah.edu/informatics/competencies.doc
Nursing Informatics Competencies: Self - Assessment
http://www.nursing-informatics.com/niassess/index.html
From the website: "The National League for Nursing says schools and colleges need to incorporate more IT training into their curricula. It's not enough just to train nurses in basic computer skills, nurses also need to be proficient in how health care IT works and be able to use the technology to its best advantage, the league contends."
I reviewed the presentations by Joyce Sensemeir, Carol Gassert and Mary Anne Rizzolo at the Rutgers Conference and it got me thinking a bit more about the whole issue of nurses and informatics competencies.
Multiple sources point to a need for “informatics training” but how can we make the definition mean something to the bedside nurse or unit level manager? “The intersection of nursing science, information science and cognitive science” is a wonderful phrase but still seems distant from practice. Some people describe computer literacy is informatics, some focus on the electronic health record; others concentrate on the electronic tools used to capture data. At one level it’s a matter of functional competency – how do I enter/retrieve data from a record or how do I create a spreadsheet. At another level it is about how to use technology to make sense out of data, how to seek technologies that will enable them to work, communicate and collaborate more efficiently.
I think we need examples relevant to nurses, students and faculty other than using PDAs as a mobile library and how to enter/retrieve data from an EMR. I see informatics as about collecting, storing and retrieving data; interpreting data to become information, and applying information as knowledge not only to patient care but also personal and professional development.
It seems that in the IS world we give our clients lots of wonderful tools. Office applications, Internet access, project management software, and hardware of all sorts are pretty much everywhere. The big disconnect I see is our customers often don’t know how to use these tools beyond a very elementary level. Many still use yellow legal pads to collect data, then enter it into a spreadsheet or database. Once it’s there they may still resort to manually counting because they don’t know how to use formulas and sorting. PowerPoint presentations get too big to email because they have added high resolution photographs and resized them to display a fraction of the original dimensions but did not compress the images or change the file size. Using RSS feeds to keep abreast of news and publications is a totally new concept to many.
It reminds me of the story about a hardware salesman who sold chain saw to a customer who wanted to cut firewood. After a month the customer brought the saw back to the shop and said the new saw made life harder than ever before. The salesman looked at the saw, started it up, and the customer said “What’s that noise?”.
Today I met with the director of the Staff Development Office and we chatted about a series of workshops on practical informatics (I call it guerilla informatics). The plan is to meet with a group of staff educators to brainstorm the need for short, practical modules directed at nurse managers with the goal they will become the champions of the concept who spread it to their staff. I can see modules on using spreadsheets, presentation software and databases to collect, analyze and display information. I can see modules on how to use CINAHL and PubMed effectively as well as other sessions on using electronic tools to collaborate, educate and create personal learning environments that draw on information from multiple sources.
Two sources to gauge informatics competency
Results of aA Delphi Study to Determine Informatics Competencies for Nurses
at Four Levels of Practice
Nancy Staggers, PhD, RN, FAAN
Carole A. Gassert, PhD, RN, FAAN, FACMI
http://www.nurs.utah.edu/informatics/competencies.doc
Nursing Informatics Competencies: Self - Assessment
http://www.nursing-informatics.com/niassess/index.html
Sunday, June 22, 2008
More on Rutgers and a couple of very useful links
At the Rutgers Conference one of the outstanding presentations I attended was entitled: "Using Blogs and Wikis to Promote Community, Collaboration, and Creativity", presented by JoAnne Herman, PhD, RN and Vera Polyakova-Norwood, MEd from the University of South Carolina College of Nursing. They have incorporated both blog and wiki use into graduate and undergraduate nursing courses with resounding success.
Via the Work Literacy Blog: http://www.workliteracy.com/the-crap-test
Great visual to compare working by email and working by wiki is at: http://www.flickr.com/photos/lafabriquedeblogs/2431125685/
It was posted on Beth's Blog associated with an article called "Working Wikily"
http://beth.typepad.com/beths_blog/2008/06/working-wikily.html
It was posted on Beth's Blog associated with an article called "Working Wikily"
http://beth.typepad.com/beths_blog/2008/06/working-wikily.html
Another presentation that answered questions I have been dealing with was entitled "Reaching Digital Nirvana: A Paradigm to Automate Clinical Documentation and Transform Clinical Practice" by Jim Cato, EdD(c), MSN, RN, CRNA, MHS. His presentation dealt with the advantages of electronic documentation but what I found most interesting was his reponse to the question I asked about the prevelance of approved nursing taxonomies actually being used in the clinical setting. His response was that nobody was doing it well and that until a single standard is defined, and vendors actively incorporate those features in response to customer demands, it won't be a reality.
Mary Anne Rizzolo, EdD, RN, FAAN of the NLN presented "The NLN 2006 Survey of Informatics Competencies: Findings and Implications". There are far too many nurses who are unprepared or underprepared in informatics competencies. This applies to nurses in practice, nursing faculty and nursing students. Read the NLN position statement: Preparing the Next Generation of Nurses to Practice in a Technology-rich Environment: An Informatics Agenda, Approved May 9, 2008 on the NLN site.
Via the Work Literacy Blog: http://www.workliteracy.com/the-crap-test
The Crap Test for Internet resources: Currency, Reliability, Authority, Purpose. Just the mnemonic to assist my informatics students to critically evaluate Internet resources for healthcare!
Patrick Scollin, EdD, MT, CLS from the University of Massachusettes at Lowell presented "Bridging the Gap Between the PDA and Tablet in Healthcare: the Ultra Mobile Portable Computer at the Bedside". He described a small study where nursing students were given a 1 lb pc with a keyboard and stylus loaded with several reference materials to use during clinicals. After using the UMPC they had an opportunity to use a PDA loaded with similar software. To my surprise they preferred the PDA citing ease of use, speed, and battery life.
For the past year I've been following the development of low cost UMPCs starting with the One Laptop Per Child program. These have a full qwerty keyboard for touch typing (not thumb typing), wi-fi and a full suite of software. Intially running on Linux, some are now appearing with Windows Home. Asus was the first with the eeePC http://event.asus.com/eeepc/microsites/en/index.htm. Now contenders are appearing from HP (HP 2133), Acer (Acer Aspire One), Dell and MSI (MSI Wind). All weigh about 2lbs, and range in price from $299 and up. These small notebooks have been dubbed "netbooks".
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