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EHR standards sought to cut tech-induced errors

EHR standards sought to cut tech-induced errors | healthcare technology | Scoop.it
A leading health information management organization wants to standardize the way data are collected, stored and used by electronic health record systems so that the promise of EHRs may finally be realized and not unwittingly jeopardize physicians who use them.

 

The American Health Information Management Assn. in November is convening stakeholders — including health care professionals, health plans, quality organizations and vendors as well as the Dept. of Health and Human Services — to establish guidelines that vendors and health care organizations can use to address data integrity, patient safety, quality and the prevention of billing errors.“Unified data governance principles will help promote accuracy and consistency and reduce ambiguity,”

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Mobile technology is key to NHS service transformation

Mobile technology is key to NHS service transformation | healthcare technology | Scoop.it

How can today's mobile technology make a difference? Put simply, by giving staff the right information and tools to do their job, in any place, at any time.

 

Of course, many staff are already ‘mobile workers’, moving between wards and outpatient clinics on different sites or treating patients at home or in GP surgeries. Yet current approaches to mobile working are often highly inefficient. What health boards need to do is to ‘mobilise’ each healthcare professional's entire job, using the latest generation of mobile solutions. These overcome issues of limited and clumsy web-based access to existing back-office systems by providing native smartphone and tablet apps that draw together the information and tools staff need to support them as they work.

 

No unnecessary visits ‘back to base’

 

If we look at the typical working day of a community nurse, we can see how it will change when mobile technology is used to mobilise their entire job.

Using traditional IT solutions, a community nurse will typically begin their day by travelling to their ‘base’ at a hospital health centre for a team meeting and to plan their day's schedule. Then they need to make sure they have gathered all the patient records and other documents they will need during the day, before finally heading out for their first visit.

 

With the latest generation of mobile solutions to support them, the nurse does not need to travel to the office. They can simply log on to an app on their smartphone from home and get access to all the information they need for the day's visits, from lists of appointments and tasks to comprehensive electronic patient records, including results, photographs and x-rays. They have saved both time and the cost of an unnecessary journey in to the office thanks to a smartphone app.

 

Patient records at your fingertips

 

Maybe it's the nurse’s first visit to this patient. Traditionally, they will dig out a map, wrestle with a personal Satellite Navigation, or have to stop and ask for directions. The smartphone app shows the location of the next visit and works out the best route for all visits for the day reducing carbon footprint and maximising travel time.

 

Then, while they are with the patient, they will need to keep a record of any care given, chart any readings and note any other changes in the patient's condition. With the traditional approach, they would have two options: they might take notes on paper, which would need to be entered into the records later, taking more of their time away from patient care – and probably requiring another trip to their ‘base’. Or they might boot up their laptop and key in the data there and then, a process that healthcare professionals report often puts a barrier between them and patients.

 

With an app-based solution, however, our nurses can capture all the information they need with a few taps on their smartphone's touchscreen, whilst still talking naturally with patients and their carers. They can even snap a photograph of the current state of a wound for example that can be immediately added to the patient record.

 

With the right mobile technology, they also do not have to worry about whether or not they have a signal, or about driving around until they find one: they can enter the data while they are still with the patient, even if they do not have a signal, confident the information will be synched automatically when their smartphone next connects. There is certainly no need to return to the office at midday or the end of the day to update records and complete paperwork. Even their mileage, expenses or requests for supplies can be entered through the app.

 

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The Use Of Tablets In the World of EMRs ~ EMR, EHR & Health Care Technology

The Use Of Tablets In the World of EMRs ~ EMR, EHR & Health Care Technology | healthcare technology | Scoop.it

With a growing number of physicians adopting tablet PCs for their EMR implementations, EMR vendors and IT manufacturers are looking to build compatible native systems to facilitate user-friendly and efficient EMR execution.

 

From table desktops to thin clients and now the tablet, EMRs have been tried and tested on a variety of hardware, each bringing its own benefits and drawbacks. However, the striking surge in EMR adoption on tablet PCs has made providers sit up and take notice of this remarkably promising technology.

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Clinicians Use 6.4 Different Mobile Devices Daily On Average

Clinicians Use 6.4 Different Mobile Devices Daily On Average | healthcare technology | Scoop.it

Mobile devices are everywhere in your healthcare organization, but without a complete solution in place, the strain on your IT staff can get out of control.

 

Mobile devices among healthcare professionals has exploded over the last few years. On average, clinicians use 6.4 different mobile devices in a day on average according to IDC Healthcare Insights Study. Mobile health devices provide healthcare professionals with the ability to facilitate smoother workflows and help boost productivity.

 
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Technoclinics- Upcoming scenario in India

Technoclinics- Upcoming scenario in India | healthcare technology | Scoop.it

Medical industry in India is proud to have adopted the latest medical equipments in every specialization and has achieved tremendous results in terms of rapid and effective treatment. The benefits that the Indian IT sector has made in the global village the past 15 years, are now being extended to the Indian Healthcare industry too!

 

Taking advantage of these some clinics are transforming into “technoclinics” by smartly using technology and software in their practice.

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