Linggo, Abril 29, 2012

THE FUSION OF CARING AND TECHNOLOGY




There was a time not long ago, when physicians and nurses didn’t have much else to offer patients other than personal attention, comfort, compassion and concern for their ailments. Medical professionals were revered and respected for that and for what little they could do in regard to symptomatic treatment for incurable conditions. But because technology is approaching not only therapeutic communications are given. 






When we hear the word technology, immediately comes to our mind that there is a transformation occurring to a thing or livelihood. The general public believes that technology will improve health care efficiency, quality, safety, and cost. However, few people consider that these same technologies may also introduce errors and adverse events. 
We all know that everything has its consequences, 
the only difference is, it is how you handle on it.
 Patient care technology has become increasingly complex, transforming the way nursing care is conceptualized and delivered. Before a wide-ranging application of technology, nurses relied heavily on their senses of sight, touch, smell, and hearing to monitor patient status and to detect changes. Over time, the nurses’ unaided senses were replaced with technology designed to detect physical changes in patient conditions. 



         One of the important roles of the nurse is to be a patient advocate and to protect the interests of patients when the patients themselves cannot because of illness or inadequate health knowledge. The use of information and communication technology in nursing, is revolutionizing the way nurses interact with patients, deliver care and communicate with colleagues.
Health care is one of the most pressing challenges facing our nation. Almost any discussion related to improving healthcare, whether it implicates reducing costs or improving patient safety and satisfaction, usually has technology as a core component.





    
Technology will not solve the problem, but used appropriately will contribute to the transformation of healthcare, as it has in many other industries. With the progression of health care and technology over the last decade, example is the electronic medical record (EMR), we have seen many benefits to patient care including improvements in documentation, better legibility of chart notes and prescriptions, improvements in awareness of drug interactions, more attention to preventive health care and improved tracking of test results, and scheduling of follow up visits and future testing, to name a few.

     While technology has the potential to improve care, it is not without risks. Technology has been described as both part of the problem and part of the solution for safer health care, and some observers warned of the introduction of yet-to-be errors after the adoption of new technologies. For example, nurses and other health care providers can be so focused on data from monitors that they fail to detect potentially important subtle changes in clinical status. Problems may emerge based on the sheer volume of new devices, the complexity of the devices, the poor interface between multiple technologies at the bedside, and the haphazard introduction of new devices at the bedside. Despite the billions of dollars spent each year on an ever-increasing array of medical devices and equipment, the nursing profession has paid little attention to the implementation of technology and its integration with other aspects of the health care environment.



          At the end of this discussion:

  • you will realized how nursing informatics are important.
  • nurses common error turn to smoothly precise.
  • will determine what are the importance of nursing informatics

References:





http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK2686/


Huwebes, Abril 26, 2012


Nursing informatics: A road for progression

Nursing informatics is a combination of computer science, information science, and nursing science, designed to assist in the management and processing of nursing data, information, and knowledge to support nursing practice, education, research, and administration (Graves & Corcoran, 1989).
As time goes by many development happened in our country. A decade ago one problem that we faced is how to make life easier. In terms of health, an example was the cancer. Before when we hear the word cancer, we lose hope immediately because we knew that there is no cure for this sickness. The use of information technology has perpetuated this approach to clinical decision making through various applications.
The astonishing collection of information available electronically is one such application. The development of digital nursing languages and nomenclatures are another important supportive application. The ability to use computers for every stage of the research process, both quantitative and qualitative is another key application. Modern health care administration is strongly focused on the incorporation of all three of these developments to shape the activities, directive, and focus of contemporary nursing.
The use of technology in nursing is not new, in fact nurses have become proficient in utilizing and adapting complex technology into caring nursing practice for decades, at least since the time of Florence Nightingale in the United Kingdom and even earlier, when Jeanne Mance (1606-1673) founded the first hospital in Montreal, Nurse with Xray 1941Canada in 1642. Various forms of machinery such as ventilators and physiological monitors were first used in intensive and critical care settings, and are now currently used in adapted form in less acute areas, even in home care. Nursing has evolved significantly over the past few decades, with many of the changes being driven by advances in information and communication technology (ICT). Indisputable, there are lots of advantages that a technology helps us. 

MODEL OF NURSING INFORMATICS
                                                                   
AFTER
BEFORE
  
This images shows that as time passing by revolutionize is happening.              




 
The following advantages are -.
 Improved workload functional - The need for high-quality healthcare implies that accurate and timely information should be of primary importance.
     
Enhanced decision making - Decision support modules also provide prompts and reminders, and guides to disease linkages between signs or symptoms, etiologies or related factors and patient populations. Right clinical decisions need right information, such as accessing medical resources online and identifying the right information that is critical in decision making.
     
Improved drug administration - formation systems enable electronically prescribed drugs to become more understandable, as it is less likely that you can administer wrong drugs to patients. By using patient-charting modules, the patient's vital signs, admission and nursing assessments, care plan and nursing notes can be entered into the system and then stored in a central repository that you can retrieve when needed for drug administration.
   
Clinical data integration - Patient records have become more readable and accurate with the application of nursing information systems, which have ensured improvement of standards of keeping records.



 People who work in nursing informatics aim to develop systems that are both effective and user-friendly. Nurses may not be inclined to use a system that is too complicated, cumbersome, or takes time away from their first priority, which is patient care. Nursing informaticists also must make sure new systems integrate seamlessly with existing hospital systems and the routine workflow of the nursing process.