Clinical Decision Support and Electronic Health Records
Introduction
Information technology has revolutionized nearly every aspect of life, from how people recreate to how they work. This is no less true in the field of health care, where clinical informatics is reshaping the nursing workplace environment, how patient data is recorded and shared, and how health care is delivered. This paper will discuss clinical informatics concepts emerging in the 21st century, what evidence-based practice (EBP) shows with respect to clinical informatics, how the law figures into this issue with respect to HIPAA, privacy/confidentiality and security issues; and how patient safety, the nursing role and electronic medical records are impacted.
Clinical Informatics Concepts in the 21st Century
Controlling the flow of information to promote efficiency, security, and safety is the number one priority of clinical informatics. 21st century concepts for how this can be accomplished include training in how to find information, how to appraise information, and how to apply information. One common mistaken assumption among nurses is that having clinical informatics skills simply means to have computer literacy (Khezri & Abdekhoda, 2019). While computer literacy is a necessary component, it is by no means the full concept of informatics. In the 21st century, nurses need to know how to engage in information retrieval, the way librarians do. They need to be able to plug information into databases, pull up information from other databases, search for information manage knowledge effectively. Additionally, they have to be able to appraise information. When conducting an information search in a database, they may get a return of a thousand different references or sources of information. If they cannot process that information and appraise it well, their ability to conduct a search will be meaningless. Thus, informatics is more than just about knowing how to use a computer or how to obtain information; it is also about how to appraise information and assess its value. Keeping complete records for the purpose of electronic medical records (EMR) databases is also part of the concept because of need for continuity of care, which necessarily depends upon continuity of information (Kleib & Nagle, 2018).
Database Systems and Analytics and Their Impact on Nursing Research
Database systems require that nurses understand the concept of analytics as well. Nursing research is no different from any other kind of research in which analysis is involved. Nurses must be able to search data, appraise it, compile the relevant data, and utilize it for research purposes. Sousa, Reeder, Bondy, Ozkaynak and Weiss (2017) note that even today nurse leaders do not have adequate access to EMR. Without adequate access to EMR, nurse leader cannot engage in effective or timely decision-making (Sousa et al., 2017). Nursing research has to focus more on how to positive integrate EMR systems into nurse workplaces. One of the big questions going forward, however, is whether nurse PHDs, researchers or leaders are being prepared in the classroom to handle big data or data science (Westra et al., 2017). It appears to be the case that as technological advances are made, the need to be able to handle, process, interact with, command, and drive informational technology resources has grown—and nowhere is that seen more than in health care.
Informatics, EBP and the Law
Nursing informatics can be useful when it comes to implementing EBP for quality care (Elsayed, Hussein & Othman, 2017). However, as Effken, Weaver, Cochran, Androwich and O’Brien (2016) point out, nurses tend to be data-rich yet information-poor—meaning they have as much data as they could want at their fingertips yet they do not have the skills to retrieve or make sense of that data. One EBP to consider is the practice of mapping clinical terms to terminologies that have been standardized to help nurses better understand how to use information (Effken et al., 2016). Elsayed et al. (2017) posit that an informatics competency should be made part of the standard nursing curriculum in order to help promote the use of more EBP in the nursing field.
Nursing informatics can also be used to promote health literacy among at-risk patients (Haupeltshofer, Egerer & Seeling, 2020). By teaching older patients how to use technology to retrieve health information, nurses can increase their access to health literature and foster their health literacy. Technology thus has advantages that can be used to encourage the EBP of promoting health literacy as a means of preventive medicine. Still, this requires an informatics competency that is not as of yet being standardized in nurse education.
Nurses using clinical informatics still have to be careful, however, with respect to how information is shared. The Privacy Act of 1974 regulates how information is collected by the federal government, which means that nurses working in Veterans...
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