cover image - Health Informatics - Elsevier eBook on Vitalsource, 3rd Edition
ISBN: 9780323846486
Copyright: 2024
Publication Date: 01-11-2023
Page Count: 688
Imprint: Elsevier
List Price: $85.99

Health Informatics - Elsevier eBook on Vitalsource, 3rd Edition

by Lynda R. Hardy, PhD, RN

Elsevier eBook on VitalSource

cover image - Health Informatics - Elsevier eBook on Vitalsource, 3rd Edition
ISBN: 9780323846486
Copyright: 2024
Publication Date: 01-11-2023
Page Count: 688
Imprint: Elsevier
List Price: $85.99
Was $85.99

Now $75.67

Or $0.00 with a valid access code

**American Journal of Nursing (AJN) Book of the Year Awards, 1st Place in Informatics, 2023**
**Selected for Doody’s Core Titles® 2024 in Informatics**

Learn how information technology intersects with today’s health care! Health Informatics: An Interprofessional Approach, 3rd Edition, follows the tradition of expert informatics educators Ramona Nelson and Nancy Staggers with new lead author, Lynda R. Hardy, to prepare you for success in today’s technology-filled healthcare practice. Concise coverage includes information systems and applications, such as electronic health records, clinical decision support, telehealth, mHealth, ePatients, and social media tools, as well as system implementation. New to this edition are topics that include analytical approaches to health informatics, increased information on FHIR and SMART on FHIR, and the use of health informatics in pandemics.

    • Chapters written by experts in the field provide the most current and accurate information on continually evolving subjects like evidence-based practice, EHRs, PHRs, mobile health, disaster recovery, and simulation
    • Objectives, key terms, and an abstract at the beginning of each chapter provide an overview of what each chapter will cover
    • Case studies and discussion questions at the end of each chapter encourage higher-level thinking that can be applied to real world experiences
    • Conclusion and Future Directions discussion at the end of each chapter reinforces topics and expands on how the topic will continue to evolve
    • Open-ended discussion questions at the end of each chapter enhance students’ understanding of the subject covered
    • mHealth chapter discusses all relevant aspects of mobile health, including global growth, new opportunities in underserved areas, governmental regulations on issues such as data leaking and mining, implications of patient-generated data, legal aspects of provider monitoring of patient-generated data, and increased responsibility by patients
    • Important content, including FDA- and state-based regulations, project management, big data, and governance models, prepares students for one of nursing’s key specialty areas
    • UPDATED! Chapters reflect the current and evolving practice of health informatics, using real-life healthcare examples to show how informatics applies to a wide range of topics and issues
    • NEW! Strategies to promote healthcare equality by freeing algorithms and decision-making from implicit and explicit bias are integrated where applicable
    • NEW! The latest AACN domains are incorporated throughout to support BSN, Master’s, and DNP programs
    • NEW! Greater emphasis on the digital patient and the partnerships involved, including decision-making
  • SECTION 1 Fundamental Knowledge in Health Informatics
    1. An Introduction to Health Informatics
    2. Theoretical Frameworks
    3. Health Systems and Information Flow
    4. Informatics-Related Standards and Standard Setting
    5. Evaluation of Health Information Systems—Purposes, Theories, and Methods

    SECTION 2 Health Information Systems and Applications
    6. Technical Infrastructure
    7. The Electronic Health Record and Precision Care
    8. Administrative Applications in Healthcare
    9. Community Health Systems
    10. Public Health Informatics

    SECTION 3 Decision-Making and the Digitally Engaged Patient
    11. Evidence-Based Informatics
    12. Clinical Decision Support
    13. The Evolving ePatient
    14. Digital Health: Managing Health and Wellness
    15. Personal Health Records
    16. Social Media Tools for Health Informatics

    SECTION 4 Lifecycle Management
    17. Project Management Principles
    18. Strategic Planning and Information System Selection
    19. Contract Negotiations and Software Licensing
    20. Implementing and Upgrading an Information System
    21. Downtime and Disaster Recovery for Health Information Systems

    SECTION 5 Usability, Analytics, and Education
    22. Improving the User Experience for Health Information Technology
    23. Data Science and Analytics in Healthcare
    24. Safety and Quality Initiatives in Health Informatics
    25. Informatics in the Curriculum
    26. Distance Education—A New Frontier

    SECTION 6 Data Governance, Legal, and Regulatory Issues
    27. Legal Issues, Federal Regulations, and Accreditation
    28. Privacy and Security
    29. MACRA and Interoperability
    30. Health Policy and Health Informatics
    31. Health Information Technology Governance

    SECTION 7 Global and Future Perspectives in Health Informatics
    32. Global Health Informatics
    33. Informatics and the Future of Healthcare

  • Lynda R. Hardy, PhD, RN, Associate Professor of Clinical Nursing, Director, Data Science and Discovery, The Ohio State University, College of Nursing, Columbus, Ohio, USA
    • Ways of Reading
      • The appearance of the text and page layout can be modified according to the capabilities of the reading system (font family and font size, spaces between paragraphs, sentences, words, and letters, as well as color of background and text)
      • This e-publication is accessible to the full extent that the file format and types of content allow, on a specific reading device, by default, without necessarily including any additions such as textual descriptions of images or enhanced navigation
      • All content can be read as read aloud speech or dynamic braille
      • Has alternative text descriptions for images
    • Conformance
    • Navigation
      • Table of contents to all chapters of the text via links
      • Index with links to referenced entries
      • Elements such as headings, tables, etc. for structured navigation
      • Page list to go to pages from the print source version
    • Rich Content
      • Math formulas in accessible format (MathML)
      • Information-rich images are described by extended descriptions
    • Hazards
      • The publication contains no hazards
    • Product Content
      • Content includes any type of illustrations.
      • The primary content is text.
      • Content includes maps and/or other cartographic content.
      • Content includes a significant number of actionable (clickable) web links to external content, downloadable resources, supplementary material, etc.
      • Content includes a significant number of actionable (clickable) cross-references, hyperlinked notes and annotations, or with other actionable links between largely textual elements (e.g., quiz/test questions, 'choose your own ending', etc.).
      • Content includes photographs, whether in a plate section / insert or not.
      • Content includes figures, diagrams, charts and/or graphs, including other 'mechanical' (i.e. non-photographic) illustrations.
      • Content includes images displayed in a specific order for the purpose of graphic storytelling or giving information (e.g. graphic novels, comics and manga). May include text integrated into the image (as speech and thought bubbles, textual 'sound' effects, captions etc.).
      • Content includes text within images, including text-as-text embedded in diagrams, charts, or within images containing speech balloons, thought bubbles, captions, etc.
      • Content includes visual content that is purely decorative and is not necessary to understanding of the content.
      • Content includes mathematical notations, formulae.
      • At least some text - including text within other images - is 'text as an image' (i.e., a picture of text).
    • Legal Considerations
      • No information is available
    • Additional Accessibility Information
      • Content is enhanced with ARIA roles to optimize organization and facilitate navigation
      • Page breaks included from the original print source
      • For readers with color vision deficiency, use of color (e.g., in diagrams, graphics and charts, in prompts, or on buttons inviting a response) is not the sole means of graphical distinction or of conveying information
      • The body text is presented with a contrast ratio of at least 4.5:1 (or 3:1 for large/heading text)
      • Ultra-high contrast between text and background
      • E-publication includes basic navigation (usually less detailed than TOC-based navigation)
      • Where links, controls or buttons are included in the content, the purpose or functionality of each link, control or button is apparent from the associated text alone - or where it is unclear, separate link, control or button descriptions are provided
      • All (or substantially all) textual matter is arranged in a single logical reading order (including text that is visually presented as separate from the main text flow, e.g., in boxouts, captions, tables, footnotes, endnotes, citations, etc.). Non-textual content is also linked from within this logical reading order. (Purely decorative non-text content can be ignored).
      • Content provides explanations for unusual words, abbreviations, acronyms, idioms, jargon in an accessible form, such as glossaries, scripted pop-ups.
      • Where interactive content is included in the product, controls are provided (e.g., for speed, pause and resume, reset) and labelled to make their use clear.
      • The language of the text has been specified (e.g., via the HTML or XML lang attribute) to optimise text-to-speech (and other alternative renderings), both at the whole document level and, where appropriate, for individual words, phrases or passages in a different language.
Was $85.99

Now $75.67

Or $0.00 with a valid access code