Thursday, March 20, 2014

Health Care Information Systems


Health Care Information Systems: A Practical Approach for Health Care Management [Paperback]

Author: Karen A. Wager | Language: English | ISBN: 0470387807 | Format: PDF, EPUB

Health Care Information Systems: A Practical Approach for Health Care Management
Download electronic versions of selected books Health Care Information Systems: A Practical Approach for Health Care Management from with Mediafire Link Download Link
The Best Selling Text in the Field

Updated for the New Era of Health Care IT

"This is the most comprehensive and authoritative book available for the field today."
—Mark L. Diana, PhD, assistant professor and MHA program director, School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine, Tulane University

"With health care information technology now in the national policy spotlight, this book should be required reading for every health care administrator and student."
—Mark Leavitt, MD, PhD, chairman, Certification Commission for Healthcare Information Technology

"The book provides an excellent overview of foundational principles and practical strategies—a valuable reference for health administration and health informatics students and professionals."
—Eta S. Berner, EdD, professor, Department of Health Services Administration, University of Alabama, Birmingham

"The authors skillfully provide the tools necessary to facilitate movement from a paper-based to an electronic health record environment while championing the importance of managing in such an environment."
— Melanie S. Brodnik, PhD, director and associate professor, School of Allied Medical Professions, Ohio State University

"Deploying health care information technology today is like navigating whitewater in the midst of a raging storm. Leveraging investments while introducing significant change is no easy task. It requires focused attention, a spirit of collaboration, and a willingness to learn from others. This book is written for the IT leader who is willing to tackle these challenges."
—Stephanie Reel, CIO and vice provost for Information Technologies, Johns Hopkins University

Direct download links available for Health Care Information Systems: A Practical Approach for Health Care Management
  • Paperback: 544 pages
  • Publisher: Jossey-Bass; 2 edition (June 2, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0470387807
  • ISBN-13: 978-0470387801
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 7 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #124,748 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
    • #18 in Books > Medical Books > Medical Informatics
    • #43 in Books > Medical Books > Administration & Medicine Economics > Health Care Administration
Tables, Figures, and Exhibits.

Foreword.

Acknowledgments.

The Authors.

Preface.

PART 1 HEALTH CARE INFORMATION.

1 INTRODUCTION TO HEALTH CARE INFORMATION.


Learning Objectives.


Types of Health Care Information.


Internal Data and Information: Patient Specific—Clinical.


Internal Data and Information: Patient Specific—Administrative.


Internal Data and Information: Patient Specific—Combining Clinical and Administrative.


Internal Data and Information: Aggregate—Clinical.


Internal Data and Information: Aggregate—Administrative.


Internal Data and Information: Aggregate—Combining Clinical and Administrative.


External Data and Information: Comparative.


External Data and Information: Expert or Knowledge Based.


Summary.


Key Terms.


Learning Activities.

2 HEALTH CARE DATA QUALITY.


Learning Objectives.


Data Versus Information.


Problems with Poor-Quality Data.


Documentation.


Ensuring Data and Information Quality.


Data Definitions.


Testing the Use of IT.


Summary.


Key Terms.


Learning Activities.

3 HEALTH CARE INFORMATION REGULATIONS, LAWS, AND STANDARDS.


Learning Objectives.


Licensure, Certification, and Accreditation.


Legal Aspects of Managing Health Information.


Recent Health Care Privacy Violations.


Summary.


Key Terms.


Learning Activities.

PART 2 HEALTH CARE INFORMATION SYSTEMS.

4 HISTORY AND EVOLUTION OF HEALTH CARE INFORMATION SYSTEMS.


Learning Objectives.


Definition of Terms.


History and Evolution.


Why Health Care Lags in IT.


Summary.


Key Terms.


Learning Activities.

5 CURRENT AND EMERGING USE OF CLINICAL INFORMATION SYSTEMS.


Learning Objectives.


The Electronic Medical Record.


2007 Davies Award Recipients: Ambulatory Care Category.


2007 Davies Award Recipient: Organizational Category.


Other Major HCIS Types.


CPOE Implementation.


Guidelines for Clinical Electronic Mail Communication.


Fitting Applications Together.


Information Exchange Across Boundaries.


Overcoming Barriers to Adoption.


Summary.


Key Terms.


Learning Activities.

6 SYSTEM ACQUISITION.


Learning Objectives.


System Acquisition: A Definition.


Systems Development Life Cycle.


System Acquisition Process.


Project Management Tools.


Sample Contents of a Project Repository.


Things That Can Go Wrong.


Summary.


Key Terms.


Learning Activities.

7 SYSTEM IMPLEMENTATION AND SUPPORT.


Learning Objectives.


System Implementation Process.


Managing the Organizational Aspects.


System Support and Evaluation.


Summary.


Key Terms.


Learning Activities.

PART 3 INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY.

8 TECHNOLOGIES THAT SUPPORT HEALTH CARE INFORMATION SYSTEMS.


Learning Objectives.


System Software.


Data Management and Access.


Relational Data Modeling.


Networks and Data Communications.


Information Processing Distribution Schemes.


The Internet, Intranet, and Extranets.


Clinical and Managerial Decision Support.


Trends in User Interactions with Systems.


Information Systems Architecture.


Choosing the System Architecture.


Summary.


Key Terms.


Learning Activities.

9 HEALTH CARE INFORMATION SYSTEM STANDARDS.


Learning Objectives.


Standards Development Process.


Classification, Vocabulary, and Terminology Standards.


Health Record Content Standards.


Summary.


Key Terms.


Learning Activities.

10 SECURITY OF HEALTH CARE INFORMATION SYSTEMS.


Learning Objectives.


The Health Care Organization’s Security Program.


Threats to Health Care Information.


Overview of HIPAA Security Rule.


Outline of HIPAA Security Rule.


Administrative Safeguards.


Physical Safeguards.


Technical Safeguards.


Password Do's and Don'ts.


Security in a Wireless Environment.


Remote Access Security.


Summary.


Key Terms.


Learning Activities.

PART 4 SENIOR MANAGEMENT IT CHALLENGES.

11 ORGANIZING INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY SERVICES.


Learning Objectives.


Information Technology Functions.


Organizing IT Staff and Services.


In-House Versus Outsourced IT.


Evaluating IT Effectiveness.


Assessing the IT Function.


Managing Core IT Processes.


Summary.


Key Terms.


Learning Activities.

12 IT ALIGNMENT AND STRATEGIC PLANNING.


Learning Objectives.


Overview of Strategy.


Areas Requiring IT Strategy.


IT Strategy Vectors.


The IT Asset and Governing Concepts.


A Normative Approach to IT Strategy.


Sample IT Agenda for a Strategy to Improve Patient Scheduling Service.


Sample IT Agenda for a Strategy to Improve Health Information Access and Self-Service for Patients.


Sample of Recommendations for IT Nursing Documentation Support to Improve Patient Safety.


IT Strategy and Alignment Challenges.


IT as a Competitive Advantage.


How Great Companies Use IT.


Summary.


Key Terms.


Learning Activities.

13 IT GOVERNANCE AND MANAGEMENT.


Learning Objectives.


IT Governance.


The Foundation of IT Governance.


Principles for IT Investments and Management.


Improving Coordination and Working Relationships.


Archetypes of IT Governance Decision Making.


IT Effectiveness.


Principles for High Performance.


IT Budget.


Summary.


Key Terms.


Learning Activities.

14 MANAGEMENT'S ROLE IN MAJOR IT INITIATIVES.


Learning Objectives.


Managing Change Due to IT.


Managing IT Projects.


Understanding IT Initiative Failures.


Critical Success Factors.


IT Project Implementation Checklist.


Summary.


Key Terms.


Learning Activities.

15 ASSESSING AND ACHIEVING VALUE IN HEALTH CARE INFORMATION SYSTEMS.


Learning Objectives.


Definition of IT-Enabled Value.


Four Types of IT Investment.


The IT Project Proposal.


Steps to Improve Value Realization.


Why IT Fails to Deliver Returns.


Analyses of the IT Value Challenge.


Summary.


Key Terms.


Learning Activities.

16 HEALTH IT LEADERSHIP.


Case 1: Board Support for a Capital Project.


Case 2: The Decision to Develop an IT Strategic Plan.


Case 3: Selection of a Patient Safety Strategy.


Case 4: Strategic IS Planning for the Hospital ED.


Case 5: Planning an EMR Implementation.


Case 6: Considerations for Voice over IP Telephony.


Case 7: Implementing a Capacity Management Information System.


Case 8: Implementing a Telemedicine Solution.


Case 9: Replacing a Practice Management System.


Case 10: Conversion to an EMR Messaging System.


Case 11: Concerns and Workarounds with a Clinical Documentation System.


Case 12: Strategies for Implementing CPOE.


Case Study 13: Implementing a Syndromic Surveillance System.


Case Study 14: The Admitting System Crashes.


Case Study 15: Breaching the Security of an Internet Patient Portal.


Case Study 16: Assessing the Value and Impact of CPOE.

Appendixes.


A Overview of the Health Care IT Industry.


B Sample Project Charter.

References.

Index.

I bought this book to help me transition into an executive position in healthcare IT management. I have 15 years total of deep backend UNIX, networking, database, and SOA experience. The last 5 years have been in IT leadership. My main goal for this (very expensive) book was to get an understanding of IT healthcare specific protocols and HIPPA IT compliance standards.

If you are in the same situation as me, then you will find 50% of this book useful. Chapters 1-3 and 9-10 deliver the information required for a seasoned IT veteran to make the "jump" to healthcare IT. All the other chapters cover executive level IT material at a very elementary level. Even though this material is healthcare related, it is all the very basics of creating business requirements, acquiring systems, and building out sustainable architectures (all "theory" discussions with no practical "bit level" concepts). One of the chapters is a review of basic computing principles (like TCP/IP stack and RDBMS definitions). If you have been in IT leadership before, this is nothing new and stuff you have learned through the school of hard knocks. For those of you who are studying for an entry level IT management position with ZERO technical experience, this is a great "book learning" book to protect you from sounding stupid in meetings.

Overall, the book accomplished the mission. Given that there is sparse material on the subject, it was worth the investment.
By Glancyguy
While the text has some erudite points about the meaning and purpose of medical records, it is out of date and never mentions the VA medical system which has completely automated, integrated medical records for all of its facilities. Like all IT matters, this subject needs to be updated continually and clearly hasn't been.
By Claude Lieber, MD

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