Safety of Health IT (eBook, PDF)
Clinical Case Studies
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Safety of Health IT (eBook, PDF)
Clinical Case Studies
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This practical text provides an overview of the adverse consequences of health information technology (HIT) and its impact on patient safety. Specific cases of errors and risks related to various types of HIT are featured along with best practices for patient safety, workflows and organizational standards. The full impact of these challenges with meaningful solutions are openly examined. Written from a clinical perspective, healthcare professionals within multiple settings will find this timely book an invaluable resource to this essential and bourgeoning technology.
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This practical text provides an overview of the adverse consequences of health information technology (HIT) and its impact on patient safety. Specific cases of errors and risks related to various types of HIT are featured along with best practices for patient safety, workflows and organizational standards. The full impact of these challenges with meaningful solutions are openly examined. Written from a clinical perspective, healthcare professionals within multiple settings will find this timely book an invaluable resource to this essential and bourgeoning technology.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Springer International Publishing
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. August 2016
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9783319311234
- Artikelnr.: 46926637
- Verlag: Springer International Publishing
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. August 2016
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9783319311234
- Artikelnr.: 46926637
Abha Agrawal, MD, FACP Chief Clinical Operations Officer IKS Health, New York, NY
Chapter 1 – First Do No Harm: An overview of HIT and Patient Safety.- Chapter 2 – An overview of HIT-related errors.- Section I: Errors Related to Various Types of Health Information Technologies.- Chapter 3 – Errors related to CPOE.- Chapter 4 – Errors related to alert fatigue.- Chapter 5 – Unintended consequences of bar-code assisted medication administration.- Chapter 6 – Errors related to outpatient e-prescribing.- Chapter 7 – Errors related to alarms and monitors.- Chapter 8 – Errors related to personal mobile technology.- Section II: Health Information Technology Implementation Issues.- Chapter 9 – Improving clinical documentation integrity.- Chapter 10 – EHR and physician-patient communication.- Chapter 11 – Patient identification errors and HIT: Friend or foe?.- Chapter 12 – Errors related to health information exchange.- Section III: Specialty Considerations.- Chapter 13 – Safety considerations inradiation therapy.- Chapter 14 – Safety considerations in pediatric informatics.- Chapter 15 – Safety considerations in ambulatory care informatics.- Section IV: Organizational Considerations.- Chapter 16 – Health information technology and medical liability risks.- Chapter 17 – Improving safety through enterprise risk management.- Chapter 18 – Managing HIT contract process for patient safety.- Chapter 19 – Improving safety of medical device use through training.
Chapter 1 - First Do No Harm: An overview of HIT and Patient Safety.- Chapter 2 - An overview of HIT-related errors.- Section I: Errors Related to Various Types of Health Information Technologies.- Chapter 3 - Errors related to CPOE.- Chapter 4 - Errors related to alert fatigue.- Chapter 5 - Unintended consequences of bar-code assisted medication administration.- Chapter 6 - Errors related to outpatient e-prescribing.- Chapter 7 - Errors related to alarms and monitors.- Chapter 8 - Errors related to personal mobile technology.- Section II: Health Information Technology Implementation Issues.- Chapter 9 - Improving clinical documentation integrity.- Chapter 10 - EHR and physician-patient communication.- Chapter 11 - Patient identification errors and HIT: Friend or foe?.- Chapter 12 - Errors related to health information exchange.- Section III: Specialty Considerations.- Chapter 13 - Safety considerations inradiation therapy.- Chapter 14 - Safety considerations in pediatric informatics.- Chapter 15 - Safety considerations in ambulatory care informatics.- Section IV: Organizational Considerations.- Chapter 16 - Health information technology and medical liability risks.- Chapter 17 - Improving safety through enterprise risk management.- Chapter 18 - Managing HIT contract process for patient safety.- Chapter 19 - Improving safety of medical device use through training.
Chapter 1 – First Do No Harm: An overview of HIT and Patient Safety.- Chapter 2 – An overview of HIT-related errors.- Section I: Errors Related to Various Types of Health Information Technologies.- Chapter 3 – Errors related to CPOE.- Chapter 4 – Errors related to alert fatigue.- Chapter 5 – Unintended consequences of bar-code assisted medication administration.- Chapter 6 – Errors related to outpatient e-prescribing.- Chapter 7 – Errors related to alarms and monitors.- Chapter 8 – Errors related to personal mobile technology.- Section II: Health Information Technology Implementation Issues.- Chapter 9 – Improving clinical documentation integrity.- Chapter 10 – EHR and physician-patient communication.- Chapter 11 – Patient identification errors and HIT: Friend or foe?.- Chapter 12 – Errors related to health information exchange.- Section III: Specialty Considerations.- Chapter 13 – Safety considerations inradiation therapy.- Chapter 14 – Safety considerations in pediatric informatics.- Chapter 15 – Safety considerations in ambulatory care informatics.- Section IV: Organizational Considerations.- Chapter 16 – Health information technology and medical liability risks.- Chapter 17 – Improving safety through enterprise risk management.- Chapter 18 – Managing HIT contract process for patient safety.- Chapter 19 – Improving safety of medical device use through training.
Chapter 1 - First Do No Harm: An overview of HIT and Patient Safety.- Chapter 2 - An overview of HIT-related errors.- Section I: Errors Related to Various Types of Health Information Technologies.- Chapter 3 - Errors related to CPOE.- Chapter 4 - Errors related to alert fatigue.- Chapter 5 - Unintended consequences of bar-code assisted medication administration.- Chapter 6 - Errors related to outpatient e-prescribing.- Chapter 7 - Errors related to alarms and monitors.- Chapter 8 - Errors related to personal mobile technology.- Section II: Health Information Technology Implementation Issues.- Chapter 9 - Improving clinical documentation integrity.- Chapter 10 - EHR and physician-patient communication.- Chapter 11 - Patient identification errors and HIT: Friend or foe?.- Chapter 12 - Errors related to health information exchange.- Section III: Specialty Considerations.- Chapter 13 - Safety considerations inradiation therapy.- Chapter 14 - Safety considerations in pediatric informatics.- Chapter 15 - Safety considerations in ambulatory care informatics.- Section IV: Organizational Considerations.- Chapter 16 - Health information technology and medical liability risks.- Chapter 17 - Improving safety through enterprise risk management.- Chapter 18 - Managing HIT contract process for patient safety.- Chapter 19 - Improving safety of medical device use through training.