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Healthcare Information Management Systems: Cases, Strategies, and Solutions Fifth Edition 2022 [Kõva köide]

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  • Formaat: Hardback, 490 pages, kõrgus x laius: 254x178 mm, kaal: 1318 g, 67 Illustrations, color; 34 Illustrations, black and white; XXI, 490 p. 101 illus., 67 illus. in color., 1 Hardback
  • Sari: Health Informatics
  • Ilmumisaeg: 26-Nov-2022
  • Kirjastus: Springer International Publishing AG
  • ISBN-10: 3031079116
  • ISBN-13: 9783031079115
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  • Formaat: Hardback, 490 pages, kõrgus x laius: 254x178 mm, kaal: 1318 g, 67 Illustrations, color; 34 Illustrations, black and white; XXI, 490 p. 101 illus., 67 illus. in color., 1 Hardback
  • Sari: Health Informatics
  • Ilmumisaeg: 26-Nov-2022
  • Kirjastus: Springer International Publishing AG
  • ISBN-10: 3031079116
  • ISBN-13: 9783031079115
Teised raamatud teemal:

This new edition of the classic textbook provides bold and honest descriptions of the current and evolving state of US healthcare information technology. Emerging technologies and novel practice and business models are changing the delivery and management of healthcare, as innovation and adoption meet new needs and challenges, such as those posed by the recent COVID-19 pandemic. Many facets of these are presented in this volume:

• The increasing mutual impact of information technology and healthcare with respect to costs, workforce training and leadership

• The changing state of healthcare IT privacy, security, interoperability and data sharing through health information exchange

• The rise and growing importance of telehealth/telemedicine in the era of COVID-19

• Innovations and trends in the development and deployment of health IT in public health, disease modeling and tracking, and clinical/population health research

• Current work in health IT as it is used in patient safety, chronic disease management, critical care, rehabilitation/long-term/home-based patient care and care coordination

• “Brave new world” visions of healthcare and health IT, with forward- looking considerations of the impact of artificial intelligence, machine learning on healthcare equity and policy

Building on the success of previous editions, this 5th edition of Healthcare Information Management Systems: Cases, Strategies, and Solutions provides healthcare professionals insights to new frontiers and to the directions being taken in the technical, organizational, business and management aspects of information technology in the ongoing quest to optimize healthcare quality and cost, and to improve universal health at all levels.

Part I The Current State
1 Estimating the United States' Cost of Healthcare Information Technology
3(36)
Ross Koppel
2 Innovating Payment Models for High-Value Healthcare
39(14)
Christopher P. Tompkins
Stephen Bandeian
3 Leadership and Change
53(12)
Patricia Hinton Walker
Bonnie Blueford
John M. Walker
4 Promoting Informatics Workforce Development Through Global Initiatives
65(16)
Man Qing Liang
Trisha Pongco
Toria Shaw Morawski
5 Preparing Clinicians and Patients for the Future of Virtual Medicine and Telehealth
81(12)
Bridget C. Calhoun
6 Privacy and Security
93(20)
Darren Lacey
7 Interoperability: Current Considerations
113(20)
Hans J. Buitendijk
8 Health Information Exchange
133(16)
David Horrocks
Lindsey Ferris
Hadi Kharrazi
Part II Innovations and Trends
9 Telemedicine: Its Past, Present and Future
149(12)
Richard S. Bakalar
10 The Telehealth Challenge During COVID-19 Emergency Preparedness and Response
161(6)
Anne M. Hewitt
Joan M. Kiel
11 Information Technology and Operational Issues for Emergency Preparedness and Response
167(14)
Stephen L. Wagner
12 Data Use in Public Health
181(20)
Musa A. Kana
Ahmad Khanijahani
Ismail A. Raji
Abdu Adamu
Faina Linkov
13 Patient Safety and Health Information Technology
201(8)
Yushi Yang
Samantha Pitts
Allen Chen
Nicole Mollenkopf
Taylor Woodroof
Bridgette Thomas
14 Digital Health in Chronic Care and Self-Management
209(14)
Malinda Peeples
Bhagyashree (Disha) Maity
15 Algorithmic Fairness and AI Justice in Addressing Health Equity
223(12)
Yoonyoung Park
Moninder Singh
Eileen Koski
Daby M. Sow
Elisabeth Lee Scheufele
Tiffani J. Bright
16 Managing Clinical Data in Neurocritical Care
235(12)
Peter H. Dziedzic
Jose I. Suarez
17 Data-Driven Disease Progression Modeling
247(30)
Kenney Ng
Mohamed Ghalwash
Prithwish Chakraborty
Daby M. Sow
Akira Koseki
Hiroki Yanagisawa
Michiharu Kudo
18 Virtual Health in Patient Care and Clinical Research
277(24)
Tianna M. Umann
Molly McCarthy
Clifford Goldsmith
Paul Slater
Christopher Regan
19 Digital Health Solutions Transforming Long-Term Care and Rehabilitation
301(16)
Mohamed-Amine Choukou
Xin Xin (Katie) Zhu
Shwetambara Malwade
Eshita Dhar
Shabbir Syed Abdul
20 Learning Interprofessionally from a Real-Life Simulation in a Smart Home
317(8)
Gabriela Mustata Wilson
Ruth E. Metzger
21 Predicting Preventive Care Service Usage in a Direct Primary Care Setting Using Machine Learning
325(16)
Sugato Bagchi
Ching-Hua Chen
George R. Kim
Judy George
Thomas A. Gagliardi
Marion J. Ball
Sasha E. Ballen
Jane L. Snowdon
Part III Horizons
22 Healthcare Delivery in the Digital Age
341(14)
M. Chris Gibbons
Yahya Shaihk
Frances Ayalasomayajula
23 Informatics and Clinical Workforce Competencies and Education
355(8)
William Hersh
24 Emerging Need for a New Vision of Multi-Interprofessional Training in Health Informatics
363(12)
Gabriela Mustata Wilson
Patricia Hinton Walker
Marion J. Ball
25 Understanding Disparities in Healthcare: Implications for Health Systems and AI Applications
375(14)
Eileen Koski
Elisabeth Lee Scheufele
Hema Karunakaram
Morgan A. Foreman
Winnie Felix
Irene Dankwa-Mullan
26 Addressing Health Equity: Sources, Impact and Mitigation of Biased Data
389(12)
Eileen Koski
Fernando Suarez Saiz
Yoonyoung Park
Brett R. South
Elisabeth Lee Scheufele
Irene Dankwa-Mullan
27 A Future Health Care Analytic System: Part 1---What the Destination Looks Like
401(18)
Stephen Bandeian
Christopher P. Tompkins
Ashwini Davison
28 A Future Health Care Analytic System (Part 2): What is Needed and `Getting It Done'
419(16)
Stephen Bandeian
Christopher P. Tompkins
Ashwini Davison
29 HIT, Informatics and Ethics
435(18)
David L. Meyers
30 Nurse Informaticists and the Coming Transformation of the U.S. Healthcare System
453(8)
Mark Hagland
31 The Future of Health Systems: Health Intelligence
461(10)
John S. Silva
Marion J. Ball
Mark Polyak
Gabriela Mustata Wilson
32 Health IT for the Future - It Isn't (Just) About the Technology
471(8)
Stephanie L. Reel
Steven F. Mandell
Index 479
Dr. Kiel is Professor of Health Management Systems and Health Administration and Public Health (HMS/HAPH) and Chairman of University HIPAA (Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act) Compliance at Duquesne University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA. She has previously worked at the Pittsburgh Mercy Health System in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA, and Lutheran Medical Center in Brooklyn, New York, USA. She has won teaching awards, presented at major conferences, and is well published, including co-editorship of the fourth edition of Healthcare Information Management Systems.

Dr. Kim is Research Associate in the Division of General Internal Medicine, Biomedical Informatics and Data Science at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and adjunct faculty in its School of Nursing in Baltimore, Maryland, USA. He earned his MD at the George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences in Washington, DC, USA, and is board-certified in general pediatrics and clinical informatics. In 1990, he became a Fellow of the American Academy of Pediatrics and was a postdoctoral fellow in medical/health sciences informatics at the Lister Hill Center for Biomedical Communications, National Library of Medicine at the National Institutes of Health and at Johns Hopkins. He has co-edited two Springer texts: Pediatric Informatics and the fourth edition of Healthcare Information Management Systems. His areas of interest include clinical informatics workflow, patient safety and health informatics education for clinicians.





Dr. Ball is Executive Director of the Multi-Interprofessional Center for Health Informatics (MICHI), Presidential Distinguished Professor in the College of Nursing and Health Innovation, and the Raj and Indra Nooyi Endowed Distinguished Chair in Bioengineering, at the University of Texas at Arlington, USA. Internationally recognized as a leader, innovator, educator and author in healthcare informatics and education with over forty-five years of experience, she has held many leadership positions, including President of the International Medical Informatics Association (IMIA), Co-Chair of the Health Information Management Systems Society (HIMSS, as well as a founding member of its Technology Informatics Guiding Education Reform (TIGER) Initiative), and the International Academy of Health Sciences Informatics (IAHSI). She is a member of the National Academy of Medicine (NAM), with past memberships on the Board of Regents of the US National Library of Medicine (NLM), the American Medical Informatics Association (AMIA), Health on The Net (HON), the College of Health Information Management Executives (CHIME), and the American Health Information Management Association (AHIMA). She has been recognized by HIMSS as one of the Most Influential Women in Health IT and in 2002 was the recipient of the Morris F. Collen Award of Excellence by AMIA. Author of over 350 publications, she has co-edited five editions of this text. Her research focuses on health informatics, curriculum design, education, and bringing enabling technology from theory into practice.