1,361 research outputs found

    A Framework for eHealth Interoperability Management

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    Reliable and secure access to and sharing of medical data can help patients practice self-care, promote patient engagement and improve their communication with healthcare professionals. This requires overcoming several interoperability, usability, ethics, security, and regulatory issues. The existence of a common interoperability framework can accelerate digital transformation in support of disease specific solutions. This paper presents a useful and relevant interoperability management framework with the potential to improve the quality of life and better control costs for the development and provision of electronic health services to individuals, within a coordinated care environment, under a local, regional, national, or cross-border setting

    New technologies in burn care: A clinical psychologist’s perspective of opportunities for advancing psychosocial care

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    British Burn Association 2017 Laing Essay Prize Winne

    Opportunities And Challenges of E-Health and Telemedicine Via Satelite

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    The introduction of Information and Communication Technology (ICT) in the health scenario is instrumental for the development of sustainable services of direct benefit for the European citizen. The setting up of satellite based applications will enhance rapidly the decentralisation and the enrichment of the European territory driving it towards a homogenous environment for healthcare

    CDC global digital health strategy

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    Lack of timely, accurate data has long hampered global efforts to combat and prevent disease. The global response to COVID-19 has brought greater attention to these challenges, underscoring the global community\u2019s vulnerability to infectious disease.To better prepare for response to future threats, CDC has launched the Data Modernization Initiative (DMI), to improve the quality, availability, and use of pandemic and response-related data. While DMI\u2019s main focus is domestic, DMI\u2019s principles, products, and impacts will apply globally. The best way to stop diseases from spreading globally is to detect and contain them early, in the countries in which they originate. One way to support this effort is to have accurate and timely data generated by country health systems, as part of routine individual and public health service delivery. Many countries are pursuing this goal under the title of \u201cdigital transformation\u201d or \u201cdigital health\u201d and these efforts are being actively supported by global organizations and other donors.While the application of digital tools to health service delivery has been undertaken for several years in lower- and middle-income countries, large-scale success and uses have been limited. Health systems are complex and constantly adapting. They are composed of chains of many linked services and digitally \u201cfixing\u201d one broken link in a chain of multiple broken links is not going to yield success. In recognition of this complexity, many countries are now taking an \u201centerprise approach\u201d to health systems, looking at the health system more holistically, addressing key issues including digital literacy and data governance, and organizing and allocating resources more effectively across the entire system. This enterprise approach is also being supported by global stakeholders as part of the digital transformation paradigm.The essence of this document then, is a collective roadmap shared by CDC and other global partners, to better align efforts and support countries in deploying enterprise approaches to realize the digital transformation or digital enablement of health services. This will not only benefit incountry health service delivery, reducing morbidity and mortality, but also provide disease experts globally with additional data sources to more effectively combat and control future outbreaks.GDHS_Strategy2022_REV_508.pd

    Advancing Ehealth Education for the Clinical Health Professions

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    This is the final report of a project that aimed to encourage and support program coordinators and directors of Australian undergraduate and postgraduate coursework programs in all allied health, nursing and medical professions to address the need for Ehealth education for entry-level clinical health professionals

    The implications and impact of 3 approaches to health information exchange: community, enterprise, and vendor‐mediated health information exchange

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    IntroductionElectronic health information exchange (HIE) is considered essential to establishing a learning health system, reducing medical errors, and improving efficiency, but establishment of widespread, high functioning HIE has been challenging. Healthcare organizations now have considerable flexibility in selecting among several HIE strategies, most prominently community HIE, enterprise HIE (led by a healthcare organization), and electronic health record vendor‐mediated HIE. Each of these strategies is characterized by different conveners, capabilities, and motivations and may have different abilities to facilitate improved patient care.MethodsI reviewed the available scholarly literature to draw conceptual distinctions between these types of HIE, to assess the current evidence on each type of HIE, and to indicate important areas of future research.ResultsWhile community HIE seems to offer the most open approach to HIE allowing for high levels of connectivity, both enterprise HIE and vendor‐mediated HIE face lower barriers to formation and sustainability. Most existing evidence is focused on community HIE and points towards low overall use, challenges to usability, and ambiguous impact. To better guide organizational leaders and policymakers in the expansion of beneficial HIE and anticipate future trends, future research should work to better capture the prevalence of other forms of HIE, and to adopt common methods to allow comparisons of rate of use, usability, and impact on patient care across studies and types of HIE.ConclusionsHealthcare organizations’ choice of HIE strategy influences the set of partners the organization is connected to and may influence the benefit that efforts supported by HIE can offer to patients. Current research is not fully capturing the diversity of approaches to HIE and their potentially varying impact on providers and patients.Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/136725/1/lrh210021_am.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/136725/2/lrh210021.pd

    Health Information Technology in the United States, 2008

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    Provides updated survey data on health information technology (HIT) and electronic health records adoption, with a focus on providers serving vulnerable populations. Examines assessments of HIT's effect on the cost and quality of care and emerging issues

    Integrated Personal Health Records: Transformative Tools for Consumer-Centric Care

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Integrated personal health records (PHRs) offer significant potential to stimulate transformational changes in health care delivery and self-care by patients. In 2006, an invitational roundtable sponsored by Kaiser Permanente Institute, the American Medical Informatics Association, and the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality was held to identify the transformative potential of PHRs, as well as barriers to realizing this potential and a framework for action to move them closer to the health care mainstream. This paper highlights and builds on the insights shared during the roundtable.</p> <p>Discussion</p> <p>While there is a spectrum of dominant PHR models, (standalone, tethered, integrated), the authors state that only the integrated model has true transformative potential to strengthen consumers' ability to manage their own health care. Integrated PHRs improve the quality, completeness, depth, and accessibility of health information provided by patients; enable facile communication between patients and providers; provide access to health knowledge for patients; ensure portability of medical records and other personal health information; and incorporate auto-population of content. Numerous factors impede widespread adoption of integrated PHRs: obstacles in the health care system/culture; issues of consumer confidence and trust; lack of technical standards for interoperability; lack of HIT infrastructure; the digital divide; uncertain value realization/ROI; and uncertain market demand. Recent efforts have led to progress on standards for integrated PHRs, and government agencies and private companies are offering different models to consumers, but substantial obstacles remain to be addressed. Immediate steps to advance integrated PHRs should include sharing existing knowledge and expanding knowledge about them, building on existing efforts, and continuing dialogue among public and private sector stakeholders.</p> <p>Summary</p> <p>Integrated PHRs promote active, ongoing patient collaboration in care delivery and decision making. With some exceptions, however, the integrated PHR model is still a theoretical framework for consumer-centric health care. The authors pose questions that need to be answered so that the field can move forward to realize the potential of integrated PHRs. How can integrated PHRs be moved from concept to practical application? Would a coordinating body expedite this progress? How can existing initiatives and policy levers serve as catalysts to advance integrated PHRs?</p

    Service-Oriented Framework for Developing Interoperable e-Health Systems in a Low-Income Country

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    e-Health solutions in low-income countries are fragmented, address institution-specific needs, and do little to address the strategic need for inter-institutional exchange of health data. Although various e-health interoperability frameworks exist, contextual factors often hinder their effective adoption in low-income countries. This underlines the need to investigate such factors and to use findings to adapt existing e-health interoperability models. Following a design science approach, this research involved conducting an exploratory survey among 90 medical and Information Technology personnel from 67 health facilities in Uganda. Findings were used to derive requirements for e-health interoperability, and to orchestrate elements of a service oriented framework for developing interoperable e-health systems in a low-income country (SOFIEH). A service-oriented approach yields reusable, flexible, robust, and interoperable services that support communication through well-defined interfaces. SOFIEH was evaluated using structured walkthroughs, and findings indicate that it scored well regarding applicability, usability, and understandability
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