The blogger in this link writes about the use of the iPad and other tablets in healthcare. I thought it would be a useful link for further information. I like to think that such technology could be of great use in nursing. Think of tedious computerized charting with drop down menus and codes that have to memorized being replaced with touch screen based flowsheets reminiscent of past efficient charting. One iPad could follow the patient throughout their stay, replacing the paper chart, and the need for nurses to interrupt patient care to find an available computer, search for the right patient, and chart. Imagine charting as you work, instead of hours later, constantly back-entering items. What could the tablet do for nursing that we haven't even thought of yet?
Link: http://mobihealthnews.com/special-issue-ipad-in-healthcare/
Sunday, May 20, 2012
Friday, May 18, 2012
YouTube video on CPOE
This video is from a Santa Monica College Health IT course. The instructor takes the time to discuss in detail the CPOE and the influence on healthcare communications. It is 8 minutes long, but is easy to use and follow. Well worth watching.
Physician Order Entry
Physician Order Entry
Physician order entry (POE) is a system in which the
physician directly enters his or her own medication orders into a computerized
system. That information is communicated to the pharmacy directly rather than
being processed by a unit secretary, then the pharmacy, and then the nurse. In
one study researchers found a remarkable decrease in the amount of time it
takes to process a medication order using a POE; before POE, it took 41.2
minutes for an order to go from being placed to the nurse receiving the
information, after it was 27 seconds (Stone, Smith, Shaft, Nelson, & Money, 2009) . No nurse at the
bedside can argue the need for technologies that make care more efficient, but
POE also makes a dent in prescription errors.
How many nurses have looked at chicken scratch on a
page and wondered what in the world that was supposed to mean? Using POE, there
is no question because the orders are placed directly into a computer, no
chicken scratch required. One review of 12 previous studies showed that there
was a significant decrease in prescription errors using POE, however, that did
not translate into decrease mortality in the patient population (Longhurst, et al., 2010) . Another significant
downside to POE is that ancillary staff may lose positions as the prescription
placement systems are streamlined (Stone, Smith, Shaft, Nelson, & Money, 2009) . One has to consider
the benefits of each new technology for both positives and negatives, until more
research is done, POE remains a wonderful idea that could revolutionize nursing
care.
References
Longhurst, C. A., Paraset, L., Sandborg, C. L.,
Widen, E., Sullivan, J., Hahn, J. S., et al. (2010). Decrease in hospital-wide
mortality after implemention of a computerized physician order entry systgem. Pediatrics,
126(1), 14-21. doi:10.1016/j/jamcollsurg.2009.01.042
Stone, W. M., Smith, B. E., Shaft, J. D., Nelson, R. D.,
& Money, S. R. (2009). Impact of a computerized order-entry system. Journal
of American College of Surgeons, 2008(5), 960-969.
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