Nursing Informatics 91: Proceedings of the Post Conference on Health Care Information Technology: Implications for Change: 46 (Lecture Notes in Medical Informatics, 46) - Tapa blanda

Libro 19 de 21: Lecture Notes in Medical Informatics

Rita L. Axford, Patsy B. Marr

 
9783540541240: Nursing Informatics 91: Proceedings of the Post Conference on Health Care Information Technology: Implications for Change: 46 (Lecture Notes in Medical Informatics, 46)

Sinopsis

For over a decade, Working Group 8 (Nursing) of the International Medical Informatics Association has sponsored, in conjunction with a host country, a triennial international symposium on nursing informatics. Each conference consists of a main conference and an invitational working conference following the main event. In 1991, the symposium was held in Melbourne, Australia and hosted by the Nursing Computer Group, Victoria and the Royal College of Nursing, Australia. Nine Pre-Conference workshops offered participants indepth exploration of a variety of information technology topics. The main conference attracted 700 participants from 19 countries and over 150 peer-reviewed papers. The invitational working conference was held at Whitehall in Sorrento, Victoria and involved the individual and collective work of 40 experts in nursing informatics from around the world. This group addressed the theme HEALTH CARE INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY: IMPLICATIONS FOR CHANGE. Health care organizations are faced with growing demand for information technology and must cope effectively with the processes and outcomes of its introduction. As the impact of information technology is felt both on the local and the global level, the conference selected for its theme a three tiered approach to information technology and organisational change - through the lens of society, the organization, and the individual. The conference was organized around three forms of contribution: plenary talks, working groups, and individual contributions by the participants. Part one of this book contains the papers of the plenary speakers for the conference.

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Reseña del editor

For over a decade, Working Group 8 (Nursing) of the International Medical Informatics Association has sponsored, in conjunction with a host country, a triennial international symposium on nursing informatics. Each conference consists of a main conference and an invitational working conference following the main event. In 1991, the symposium was held in Melbourne, Australia and hosted by the Nursing Computer Group, Victoria and the Royal College of Nursing, Australia. Nine Pre-Conference workshops offered participants indepth exploration of a variety of information technology topics. The main conference attracted 700 participants from 19 countries and over 150 peer-reviewed papers. The invitational working conference was held at Whitehall in Sorrento, Victoria and involved the individual and collective work of 40 experts in nursing informatics from around the world. This group addressed the theme HEALTH CARE INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY: IMPLICATIONS FOR CHANGE. Health care organizations are faced with growing demand for information technology and must cope effectively with the processes and outcomes of its introduction. As the impact of information technology is felt both on the local and the global level, the conference selected for its theme a three tiered approach to information technology and organisational change - through the lens of society, the organization, and the individual. The conference was organized around three forms of contribution: plenary talks, working groups, and individual contributions by the participants. Part one of this book contains the papers of the plenary speakers for the conference.

Reseña del editor

This book deals with the implications of information technology (IT) in health care for organizational change. Its purpose is to move the emphasis away from the technology towards people and organizations and to provide guidelines on successful implementation and utilization of IT by nurses in all health care settings. The topic is treated by considering three main areas - the impact of IT on society, the organization and on the individual. The text consists of collected papers written specifically for the Working Conference under the three sections mentioned plus a distillation of group discussions by the participants. The most important feature is the consideration of organizational change issues resulting from the implementation and utilization of IT in health care. The text takes a multi-national approach focusing on the experience of eminent and key nursing informatics practitioners. It should help prepare the reader for reality better than consideration of the potential of IT for nursing and health care. The novelty of the approach is that it addresses context rather than content of health care IT and nursing.

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