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Health Informatics in the Cloud

by Braunstein, Mark L.
Authors: SpringerLink (Online service) Series: SpringerBriefs in Computer Science, 2191-5768 Physical details: XVI, 98 p. 23 illus. online resource. ISBN: 1461456290 Subject(s): Computer science. | Practice of medicine. | Medical records %Data processing. | Information Systems. | Computer Science. | Health Informatics. | Health Administration. | Management of Computing and Information Systems. | Practice Management. | Health Economics.
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E-Book E-Book AUM Main Library 502.85 (Browse Shelf) Not for loan

Healthcare Delivery in the US -- Federal Policies and Initiatives -- Contemporary Informatics Tools -- Clinical Practice -- Patient-Centered Care -- Empowering the Patient -- Increasing Knowledge -- What's Next.

Despite its high cost, the US healthcare system produces relatively short life spans, and is wasteful, inefficient and has serious safety and quality issues.  While other industries have surmounted similar challenges by transforming themselves through information technology, healthcare lags behind.  Major reasons are that our approaches to care delivery and financial incentives were designed for a bygone era.  Beyond that the technology offered to practitioners has often been overly expensive, poorly designed, overly proprietary, hard to implement and difficult to use.  Spurred by a unique, one-time Federal stimulus and the new mobile, wireless and cloud technologies now available, this landscape is rapidly changing.  To succeed going forward practitioners, and those interested in entering the field, need to understand the new driving forces and have a basic understanding of contemporary clinical informatics. Practitioners, in particular, need to understand the alternative technologies and approaches available for their use in individual patient care and more continuous management of their chronic disease patients. To efficiently meet these needs, this book provides an introduction to the rationale for care transformation through clinical informatics; its application to patient care outside of hospitals; and a look at its future.  Key points are illustrated throughout by actual examples of open source and commercial health IT products and services. While written with practitioners and students entering the field of clinical informatics in mind, the book eschews technical terminology and is easily accessible by the lay reader not proficient in clinical medicine or information technology.

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