INTRODUCTION
Technology has consumed our daily activities and continues to grow in importance as the need to simplify our world increases. With healthcare needs also steadily increasing, it is necessary to compile and retrieve patient information in an efficient manner. Thus, the Nursing Informaticist is born.
Nursing Informatics (NI) is the very heart of the nursing field, saving and enriching the quality of lives everyday. Informaticists engage in various aspects of patient care, essentially acting as a liaison between the nursing and technical worlds. In this report, you will find an analysis of nursing informatics within the healthcare system.
This informational report examines the history and inner workings of NI. Also, you will discover the educational requirements, job titles, and salary averages of an informaticist.
In preparing this report information was gathered from various nursing websites, articles, and interviews of informaticists.
DEFINITION OF NURSING INFORMATICS
The ANA defines Nursing Informatics as a specialized field of nursing that integrates nursing science, computer science, and information science to manage and communicate data, information, knowledge and wisdom in nursing practice (qtd. in Newbold). It is also defined as the application of computer technology to all fields of nursing services, education and research (Kaminski)
Figure 1.
“Core Components Nursing Informatics” (Goodwin)
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HISTORY AND EVOLUTION OF NURSING INFORMATICS
There has always been a need for structured information m...
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...bright as healthcare is in high demand. Clinical experience paralleled with solid technological savvy and determination makes success inevitable.
WORKS CITED
Edwards, Helen. "Nursing Informatics." The Conference. Web. 03 Apr. 2011.
Goodwin, Linda. "Core Components of Nursing Informatics" Digital image. n. d. What is Nursing Informatics. Youtube. Web. 03 Apr. 2011.
Kaminski, June. Data, Information, Knowledge Triad. Digital image. n. d. Process. Nursing Informatics.com - Infusing Nurses with Power for the 21st Century by June Kaminski, MSN. Web. 03 Apr. 2011.
Kaminski, June. "The Revealing of Nursing Informatics." Nursing Informatics.com - Infusing Nurses with Power for the 21st Century by June Kaminski, MSN. Web. 03 Apr. 2011.
Newbold, Susan K. "A New Definition in Nursing Informatics." Advance for Nurses. Web. 03 Apr. 2011.
Hebda, T. & Czar, P. (2013). Handbook of Informatics for Nurses & Healthcare Professionals. (5th Edition). Upper Saddle River. : N.J: Pearson Education
... middle of paper ... ... Works Cited 1. Cooper, Paul, RN, MSN, Director of Nursing Informatics.
Working as a professional registered nurse in the hospital, I realized how nurses struggle to find balance between devoting the time charting on the computer and spending time taking care of the patients. Moreover, I’ve seen nurses where they get discouraged trying to find this balance between patients and charting. As a bedside nurse, I would love nothing, but to tend to the needs of my patients. The length of time consume on electronic charting all day, take the very essence of bedside nursing away from nurses, which is caring. Reducing the time of nurses being occupied on charting by eliminating redundant tasks while conforming to their standard, are the changes I would like to make. These are a few of the reasons why I wanted to pursue a degree in informatics. I would advocate for nurses everywhere and to become an instrument in providing them a better electronic health system to work on. Pursuing the degree in nursing informatics will benefit me in
McGonigle, D., Mastrian, K., G., (2012). Nursing Informatics and the Foundation of Knowledge (Custom ed., pp. 96-109). Burlington, MA: Jones & Bartlett Learning.
McGonigle, D., & Mastrian, K. (2012). Nursing Informatics (2 ed.). Burlington, MA: Jones & Bartlett.
...ng informatics. The integration of an early warning scoring system with nursing practice is a means with which technology and nursing knowledge evolve to “applied wisdom” (McGonigle & Mastrian, 2012). The data is represented by the vital signs. The collection of vital signs will generate information. The information will be scored in the system and alert the nurse when there are abnormal findings. The nest steps can only be taken by the nurse. Critical thinking, interpretation and application of the findings from the patient’s medical record are the next steps. Nurses must be able to apply the information into their nursing practice in order to continue to develop and deliver the best care to patients. As technology continues to expand to many clinical areas, nurses will need to continue to understand how the world of technology translates to patients.
There are quite a few proceedings that must occur before the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC) offers specialty certification in nursing informatics. Nursing informatics (NI) was recognized by the American Nurses Association (ANA) as a nursing specialty in 1992. Since its acceptance there have been several revisions to the published informatics scope of practices statement as well as the standards of practice. These resources are the foundational references for the nursing informatics certification exam.
Nursing documentation is an important factor of healthcare delivery today. The use of information and communication technology offers opportunities for improving patient care delivery while reducing nurses’ documentation load and increasing the time available for caring for various patient populations (Munyisia, Yu, & Hailey, 2012).
Information Systems/Technology and patient care technology for the improvement and transformation of health care is an important part of the DNP. Technology has transformed every aspect of human life in positive ways. Technology brought efficiency and improved healthcare deliverance system. Healthcare technologies enabled practitioners to better understand disease process and how to implement best treatment plan. DNP programs across the country embrace information systems and technology in their nursing curriculum because, it prepares nursing students to be innovative and deliver best care (AACN, 2006). DNP graduates must have the ability to use technology to analyze and disseminate critical information to find solutions that
First, the article reviews the results of the 2011 Nursing Informatics Workforce Survey. The survey was done to understanding the issues that an informatics nurse tackled each day and the tools that are used. The results of the 2011 survey were compared to previous surveys done
Informatics is the science of processing data (Collins English Dictionary). Nursing informatics is defined by the American Nursing Association as “a specialty that integrates nursing science, computer science, and information science to manage and communicate data, information, knowledge, and wisdom in nursing practice” (ANA, 2008). Technology in the workplace has become one of the most talked about trends in nursing from the mid 1990’s to now as the technology nurses see on the unit and in the community rapidly changes and grows even daily. Various technologies encompassing nursing informatics are computer-based schedule system to assign staff; patient safety tracking; helping patients use a device to partake in a research project; handheld computer for educating patients; using online learning in nursing education; use of a hospital information system; finding and using research on an online network. Technology has evolved with the nursing practice from hand written charting in a patients chart to tick charting on a computer system; nursing documentation has evolved along with how nurses receive and retrieve current information from the patients. Technology helps our systems grow from one unit seeing patient information to the goal of one country accessing the same database to provide continuity of care for each patient. “By the late 1980s, most hospitals had at least a rudimentary information system that required nurses to enter common data such as admission profiles and basic care requirements like diet, medications, and treatments into a computer as part of their routine duties“ (Kwantlen University, 2011). Every day, nurses are learning new and interesting ways to do their job; convey the information and care for their patie...
The evolution of healthcare informatics all deprive from increased technology that would allow the medical professionals to access needed and patient records and also be able to update, record, revise and better understand patient needs in order to perform and provide excellent customer service or patient satisfaction . Also, given that paper records are so easy to come across, being able to secure patient privacy records allows the health organization to be more secure as a whole. Mailing important information can sometimes take up to a week for the receiver to get the information, but with health informatics with just a click of a button, information is transferred and received. Before the technological advances we have today, physicians would hand-write orders and prescriptions. This could cause many errors and compromise patient safety. With the current technology, many processes are completed on a computer, leaving less room for human error.
In a highly dynamic world, the role of nurses should be studied constantly, and appropriate information technology education programs are to be adopted (Darvish, Bahramnezhad, Keyhanian, & Navidhamidi, 2014). TIGER initiative has a global inter-professional community that can access the framework provided by the Informatics Definitions document via its Virtual Learning Environment (VLE). Consequently, a feasible online instrument for self-assessment of competency levels is improved (Hunter, McGonigle, & Hebda, 2013). The Informatics definitions document collaboratively defines and documents core health informatics terminology, and this data is shared among the TIGER community across the globe. Thus, this file is important because it keeps all the nurses aligned across the world, thereby enhancing health service delivery.
Biomedical Informatics is a fairly new and emerging field. With the advent of EHRs and the need to capture and analyze data the role of the Informatics professional is an important one. The Institute of Medicine (IOM), which is a high-profile advocate for improving health care in the US, also sees an important role for informatics, designating it as one of three core competencies required for patient-centered care, along with employing evidence-based practice and applying quality improvement (Hersh, 2008). Health care leaders need to recognize the growing need of the Informatics professional. Informatics encompasses a wide variety of backgrounds: HIM professionals, IT staff, and Clinicians. Education programs must focus on the larger picture of all involved in supporting the use of information to improve human health as well as establishing occupational classifications and promoting the profession (Hersh,
Nursing informatics is a branch of nursing or area of specialty that concentrates on finding ways to improve data management and communication in nursing with the sole objective of improving efficiency, reduction of health costs and enhancement of the quality of patient care (Murphy, 2010). It is a growing area of nursing specialty that combines computer science, information technology and nursing science in the management and processing of nursing information, data and knowledge with the sole objective of supporting nursing practice and research. Various nursing theorists have formulated various theoretical frameworks or models related to nursing informatics (Wager, Lee, & Glaser, 2013). They are defined as a cluster of related concepts or ideas that establish actions that act as major guidelines in nursing informatics to issues related to the central concept of data, information and knowledge. Some of the theories that inform and assist in the framing of nursing informatics include Turley's nursing informatics model, Goossen’s framework for nursing informatics research and Staggers & Parks’ nurse-computer interaction framework (Elkind, 2009).