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Computers and Technology in Health Care: Changing the Way Health Care is Delivered

Explore how computer applications are transforming every aspect of modern health care, from performing repetitive tasks to increasing speed and accuracy of operations. Learn about the major functions of computers, the importance of computer literacy in health care jobs, information management, databases, electronic health records (EHRs), document creation, special application software, electronic spreadsheets, and diagnostic imaging technologies.

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Computers and Technology in Health Care: Changing the Way Health Care is Delivered

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  1. Chapter 18 Computers and Technology in Health Care

  2. Computers in Health Care • Computer applications influence every aspect of modern health care • Changing how health care is delivered • Performing repetitious tasks • Increasing speed and accuracy of operations

  3. Major Functions of Computers • Store huge amounts of information • Calculate and manipulate data quickly and accurately • Enable high-speed communications

  4. Computer Literacy • Efficiently perform computer tasks required for one’s work • Have basic understanding of how computers work • Be aware of current health care applications

  5. Question • True or False: • The majority of jobs in health care today require computer literacy.

  6. Answer • True • Most health care jobs require computer skills

  7. Information Management • Means of storing and accessing data • Database • Data organized in structured way • Record • Collection of related data

  8. Information Management • Means of storing and accessing data • Field • Space on record for entering data • File • Group of related records

  9. Question • When entering new patient information into the computer, an administrative medical assistant would enter the patient’s name in a _____ . • Field • File • Record

  10. Answer • A. Field • Field contains piece of data • E.g., name, date

  11. Question • True or False: • Some standardized forms use codes or abbreviations to identify various fields.

  12. Answer • True • When using computerized forms, sometimes necessary to learn and use codes and abbreviations

  13. Database Features • Quick, easy information retrieval • Multiple user access to information • Many ways to sort records • Additions and changes entered easily • Reports generated as needed • Enabling of quality improvement studies

  14. Examples of Databases in Health Care • Disease profiles • Insurance company records • Patient records • Research projects and results • Pharmaceutical records • Personnel files • Patient mailing lists

  15. Electronic Health Records (EHRs) • Federal government encouraging use • May increase efficiency and cost effectiveness • Federal funds available for technology purchases • Significant increase in use of EHRs in recent years

  16. Electronic Health Records (EHRs) • Barriers to implementation • Time to select and learn • Cost • Lack of computer skills • Concern about security of records • Worry about disruption of personal relationships with patients

  17. Question • True or False: • The majority of physician’s offices in the U.S. have an electronic health record system in place.

  18. Answer • True • As many as 78% have some type of electronic health record system in place.

  19. Creation of Documents • Word processing software • Create and save all types of documents • Design appearance • Move text • Edit and check spelling and grammar • Share documents with others • Print and/or send documents

  20. Examples of Health Care Documents • Announcements • Letters • Patient education materials • Medical reports • Memos • Research reports • Home care instructions

  21. Special Application Software • Desktop publishing • Combine text and graphics to create newsletters, brochures, etc.

  22. Special Application Software • Voice dictation • Converts spoken words to text • Used for patient charting • Faster and more cost effective than traditional dictation • Has become very accurate

  23. Question • True or False: • Reports created using voice dictation software tend to be more complete than those created from written notes.

  24. Answer • True • Reports tend to be more complete • People speak faster than they write

  25. Electronic Spreadsheets • Permits high-speed mathematical calculations • Data entered must be accurate

  26. Electronic Spreadsheets • Used for accounting and financial management • Computerized billing • If…then scenarios • Graphs and charts

  27. Question • True or False: • Medicare only accepts bills that are sent electronically.

  28. Answer • True • Since 2000, Medicare claims must be submitted electronically

  29. Diagnostics • Diagnostic imaging • Computed tomography (CT) • X-rays taken from many angles converted to cross-sectional views • Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) • Hydrogen atom activity measured and converted into images

  30. Diagnostics • Diagnostic imaging • Positron emission tomography (PET) • Radioactive substance injected and scanned • Electrical impedance tomography (EIT) • Electrical currents measured to detect differences in tissues • Still experimental

  31. Diagnostics • Diagnostic imaging • Ultrasonography • Echoes from sound waves used to form images • Digital X-rays • Used in dentistry • Can reduce amount of radiation exposure by 80%

  32. Question • Which of the following diagnostic methods is safest for use with pregnant women? • CT • MRI • Ultrasonography

  33. Answer • C. Ultrasonography • Ultrasonography uses sound waves • Rather than X-rays • Might harm fetus

  34. Diagnostics • Fiber optics • Transmission of data through hair-thin cables • Used with tiny cameras to view inside body • May be used to perform surgery guided by images on screen

  35. Diagnostics • Remote diagnostics • Web-connected devices transmit data • Examples of uses: • Heart and lung sounds • Sleep apnea diagnosis • Blood pressure

  36. Diagnostics • Expert systems • Form of artificial intelligence • Decision-making capability of computers • Operates by asking series of questions

  37. Diagnostics • Expert systems • Examples: • ATHENA • Hypertension decision support system • Clinical Evaluation and Monitoring System (CEMS) • Mental health decision support system • TherapyEdge HIV • Decision support system for treating HIV

  38. Treatment • Robotic-guided surgery • Robots guided by human surgeons • Benefits: • Increases accuracy • Is minimally invasive • Reduces healing time • Reduces chance of infection

  39. Question • True or False: • Robotic technology is used in only a few types of surgery.

  40. Answer • False • Robotic technology is used in many types of surgery • E.g., cardiac, various cancers, urological procedures

  41. Treatment • Lasers • Focused light rays • Cut and remove tissue • Three-dimensional modeling • Assist plastic surgeons and dentists

  42. Treatment • Image-guided surgery • Three-dimensional mapping system • CT plus real-time information

  43. Treatment • Rehabilitation • Increased independence for people with disabilities • Improved prosthetic devices

  44. Treatment • Pharmaceuticals • Databases improve safety and decrease harmful drug interactions • Examples: MEDI-SPAN, MEADERS • Computers speed testing and FDA approval

  45. Question • Adverse drug incidents are estimated to aff approximately _____ individuals annually. • 10,000 • 100,000 • 1,000,000

  46. Answer • C. 1,000,000 • Approximately 1,000,000 million people are victims of adverse drug incidents each year

  47. Patient Monitoring • Physiological monitoring • Heart and respiratory rates • Point-of-care charting • Bedside computers • Laptops for home health professionals • Track patient recovery

  48. Research • Literature databases • Access millions of articles and research reports from more than 3,000 journals • E.g., MEDLINE/PubMed, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature

  49. Research • Bioinformatics • Organization of biological information into databases • E.g., Human Genome Project • Identified all genes in human DNA • Stored in organized manner

  50. Education • Distance education • Courses accessed on Internet • CD-ROMs and DVDs • Self-paced learning • Computerized simulations • Licensing exams

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