How Informatics links to Nursing/Midwifery Staff 7 November 2014
Discussion points Impact of health IT on patient centred care Acceptance of health care technology by Nurses/Midwives Future of health IT on care delivery models 2
Imperatives of health care Increased acuity and complexity in a cost constrained health environment Transformation of care at the bedside/in patients homes Patients and families fully integrated into the health care team as active partners Immediacy of data Evidence based practice 3
Philosophy of Human Caring (Jean Watson) Caritas the caring moment The Nurse and the patient interact in the delivery of Nursing & Midwifery care. The Nurse/Midwife paying special attention to the patient and family member
Caritas what it really means Ten Caritas Processes Embrace altruistic values and Practice loving kindness with self and others. Instil faith and hope and honour others. Be sensitive to self and others by nurturing individual beliefs and practices. Develop helping trusting- caring relationships. Promote and accept positive and negative feelings as you authentically listen to another s story. Use creative scientific problem-solving methods for caring decision making. Share teaching and learning that addresses the individual needs and comprehension styles. Create a healing environment for the physical and spiritual self which respects human dignity. Assist with basic physical, emotional, and spiritual human needs. Open to mystery and Allow miracles to enter. \Caritas Processes refined from Inova Health Jean Watson 2007 5
Informatics the confluence of 3 sciences Bringing system information, nursing knowledge and data into the nursing field: A process of translation Needs of patients and staff ICT Telehealh Enhanced productivity of nursing care Health Informatics: computerised networking & communications Supporting Medicine, Nursing, Pharmacy and Dentistry Involving collection, analysis and movement of health information and data Including Telehealth: videoconferencing or website delivery of health information/care 6
The Essence of Informatics Effective Communication via Documentation: - Current - Timely - Accessible - Accurate Nursing Science Informatics Computer Science Information Science
Decision making points: 1. Opportunity Management: Strategic positioning Initial high investment balanced by well-coordinated, effective linking systems Immediate access to real time data Data collection and audits Workflow and care process changes The future: increased self-management interventions 2. Consumer Engagement: Seamless approach across continuum Patient Portals Patient participation in patient-centric recording process 3. Considerations: System integration is essential a standalone system cannot survive without consideration of upstream and downstream impact on other technologies in place. Emphasis placed on information literacy and informatics competencies transferable skills
The Ideal Record once, use many times - Anne Casey, RCN Standards Officer 9
1. Saved patient lists 3. Containing simple screening tools with decision support and structured data collection forms 2. Provide access to protocols 10
What this means to Nursing. finding ways to improve information management and communications in nursing to improve efficiency, reduce costs and enhance the quality of patient care. Benefits Faster, more appropriate decisions. Evidence for decision making at point of care Archived information is easily accessible for patients with chronic conditions. EMR/Digital Medical Record document at patient side with the patient. Collection and analysis of healthcare workforce data from Health IT system Electronic reporting system improves timeliness of reporting/feedback loops Data can populate different subsets of information e.g. weight/dob/umrn Risks Lack of integration/interoperability Systems take time which might otherwise be used in direct patient care. Any changes to the system can affect other similar systems care needs to be taken and testing is important. ICT drives work flow E-forms can be just as repetitive as paper based systems ICT literacy competency underdeveloped Nurses remain at PC not with patient
Nursing focus Nursing informatics competency structure Undergraduate Post graduate Nurse/Midwifery leadership competency Informatics Nurse/Midwife workforce Patient centred care customisation of tools to support information and education 12
Informatics enhances Nursing and Midwifery practice when systems are interoperable, patient centric, user friendly and support work flows that deliver quality outcomes 13
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