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Outside back cover : "Ready to take your IT skills to the healthcare industry? This concise book provides a candid assessment of the US healthcare system as it ramps up its use of electronic health records (EHRs) and other forms of IT to comply with the government’s Meaningful Use requirements. It’s a tremendous opportunity for tens of thousands of IT professionals, but it’s also a huge challenge: the program requires a complete makeover of archaic records systems, workflows, and other practices now in place. This book points out how hospitals and doctors’ offices differ from other organizations that use IT, and explains what’s necessary to bridge the gap between clinicians and IT staff. Get an overview of EHRs and the differences among medical settings -- Learn the variety of ways institutions deal with patients and medical staff, and how workflows vary -- Discover healthcare’s dependence on paper records, and the problems involved in migrating them to digital documents -- Understand how providers charge for care, and how they get paid -- Explore how patients can use EHRs to participate in their own care -- Examine healthcare’s most pressing problem—avoidable errors—and how EHRs can both help and exacerbate it"
Medical Records --- Medical Informatics --- Health Information Interoperability
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The third edition of this book has been fully revised, reorganized and extended. It provides a clear, readable introduction to healthcare interoperability for the IT professional, student, clinician and healthcare manager. Interoperability between healthcare computer systems depends on the development, implementation and deployment of appropriate standards working together as a tightly specified language. The five new chapters on Fast Health Interoperability Resources (FHIR) and its implementation in Principles of Health Interoperability: SNOMED CT, HL7 and FHIR, Third Edition cover the most important new healthcare interoperability standard for a generation. FHIR combines the best features of HL7 v2, v3 and CDA, and leverages the latest web standards. In addition, the authors discuss the core principles of healthcare interoperability, SNOMED CT and clinical terminology, HL7 and interchange formats.
Medicine. --- Public health. --- Health informatics. --- Medicine & Public Health. --- Health Informatics. --- Public Health. --- Medical informatics. --- Clinical informatics --- Health informatics --- Medical information science --- Community health --- Health services --- Hygiene, Public --- Hygiene, Social --- Public health services --- Public hygiene --- Sanitary affairs --- Social hygiene --- Health --- Human services --- Biosecurity --- Health literacy --- Medicine, Preventive --- National health services --- Sanitation --- Information science --- Medicine --- Data processing --- Medical records --- Data processing. --- EHR systems --- EHR technology --- EHRs (Electronic health records) --- Electronic health records --- Electronic medical records --- EMR systems --- EMRs (Electronic medical records) --- Information storage and retrieval systems --- Medical care --- Medical Records Systems, Computerized - organization and administration --- Medical Informatics --- Computer Communication Networks --- Health Information Interoperability --- Medical Records Systems, Computerized
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