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Historical Perspectives of Nursing and the Computer

Historical Perspectives of Nursing and the Computer. Virginia K. Saba William Scott Erdley. Objectives. Highlight a brief historical perspective of nursing and computers List the major landmark events and milestones of nursing and computers.

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Historical Perspectives of Nursing and the Computer

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  1. Historical Perspectives of Nursing and the Computer Virginia K. Saba William Scott Erdley

  2. Objectives • Highlight a brief historical perspective of nursing and computers • List the major landmark events and milestones of nursing and computers

  3. The computer is the most powerful technological tool to transform the nursing profession prior to the new century. Computer is an all encompassing term referring to information technology (IT), computer systems, and when they are used in nursing, refer to nursing informatics systems, nursing applications.

  4. Computer in nursing are used to manage information in patient care, monitor the quality of care, and evaluate the outcomes of care. Computers are also used to support nursing research, test new systems, design new knowledge databases, and advance the role of nursing in the health care industry.

  5. Major Historical Perspectives of Nursing and Computers • six time periods • four major nursing areas • standards initiatives • significant landmarks events • major landmark milestones chart

  6. Six Time Periods • Prior to the 1960s Only a few experts who formed a cadre of pioneers that attempted to adopt computers to health care and nursing. Computers were initially used in health care facilities for basic business office functions. punch cards – store data card readers – read computer programs teletypewriters – print output

  7. Six Time Periods • 1960s Questions arise: Why computers? What should be computerized? Introduce of cathode ray tube(CRT) terminals, online data communication and real-time processing.

  8. Six Time Periods (cont…) Hospital Information Systems (HISs) were developed primarily to process financial transactions and serve as billing and accounting systems. . . .because of technology limitations, lack of standardization and diversity of paper-based patient care records, progress was slow.

  9. Six Time Periods • 1970s Nurses recognized the computer’s potential for improving the documentation of nursing practice, the quality of patient care and the repetitive aspects of managing patient care. Several states and large community health agencies developed or contracted for their own computer-based management information systems (MISs).

  10. Six Time Periods • 1980s NI became an accepted specialty and many nursing experts entered the field. Many mainframe HISs emerged with nursing subsystems. The microcomputer or PC emerged.

  11. Six Time Periods • 1990s Computer technology became an integral part of health care settings, nursing practice and the nursing profession. Policies and legislation were adopted promoting computer technology in health care including nursing. In 1992, NI was approved by the American Nurses Association (ANA) as a new nursing specialty.

  12. Six Time Periods (cont. . .) Brought smaller and faster computers to the bedside and all of the point-of-care settings. LANs were developed for hospital nursing units. WANs were developed for linking care across health care facilities. Internet started to be used for linking across the different system.

  13. Six Time Periods (cont. . .) Cyberspace tools: e-mail Gopher WWW protocols FTP Telnet Web became the means for communicating online services and resources to the nursing community.

  14. Six Time Periods • Post-2000 Information technologies continued to advance with mobile technology such as with wireless tablet computers, PDAs, and smart cellular telephones. Voice over Internet protocol(VoIP) promises to provide cheap voice communication for health care organizations.

  15. Six Time Periods (cont. . .) Smart cards were realized in Europe. Recommended the health care providers use a provider identification number (PIN) to maintain privacy and security of patient information. -eHealth Initiative and Institute -Consolidated Health Information (CHI) initiative -National Health Information Infrastructure (NHII) initiative

  16. Four Major Nursing Areas • Nursing Practice Computer systems with nursing and patient care data are integrated into one interdisciplinary patient health record in EHR. Nursing practice data emerged that were recognized by ANA and used in EHR. The electronic version of nursing practice-the computer-has revolutionized and transformed nursing practice.

  17. Four Major Nursing Areas • Nursing Administration Most policy and procedure manuals are accessed and retrieved by computer. The Internet is being used by nurses to access digital libraries, online resources and research protocols.

  18. Four Major Nursing Areas • Nursing Education Campus-wide computer systems are available for students to communicate via e-mail, transfer data files, access the digital libraries, and retrieve online resources of millions of Internet WWW sites. Time, distance and cost are no longer barriers to educational programs.

  19. Four Major Nursing Areas • Nursing Research Provides the impetus to use the computer for analyzing nursing data. Software programs are available for processing both quantitative and qualitative research data.

  20. Standards Initiatives • Nursing practice standards ANA -the official professional nursing education - published The Standards of Clinical Nursing Practice which focused not only on the organizing principles of clinical nursing practice but also the standards of professional performance.

  21. Standards Initiatives (cont. . .) Has been set by the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Hospital Organizations (JCAHO) which stressed the need for adequate records on patients in hospitals and practice standards for the documentation of care by nurse.

  22. Standards Initiatives • Nursing data standards 13 nursing terminologies that have been recognized by the ANA in which it was developed at different times, has different characteristics and is used for documenting different aspects of nursing practice.

  23. Standards Initiatives (cont. . .) ANA is responsible for the recognition of the terminologies and for determining if they have met the criteria to be included in the National Library of Medicine (NLM) Unified Medical Language Systems (UMLS).

  24. Standards Initiatives • Health care data standards American National Standards Institute (ANSI)a private nonprofit membership organization. ANSI was combined with the Health Care Informatics Standards Board(HISB) to form ANSI-HISB to fulfill a request by the European standards coordinating organization to represent the U.S. standards effort

  25. Standards Initiatives (cont. . .) The ANSI-HISB organization acts as one linking to the two major organizing in Europe European Standardization Committee(CEN) International Standard Organization (ISO) American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM): ASTM E-31 Committee on Healthcare Informatics is an accredited committee that develops standards for health information and HISs designed to assist vendors, users, and anyone interested in systematizing health information.

  26. Standards Initiatives (cont. . .) Health Level Seven(HL7) an organization accredited by the ANSI, which was created to develop standards for the electronic interchange of clinical, financial and administrative information among dependent healthcare-oriented information systems

  27. Standards Initiatives (cont. . .) SNOMED International is another organization that servers as an umbrella of the structured nomenclatures and its merger with the Read Codes from the National Health Service in UK. SNOMED CT the newly named that serves as the coding strategy and has become a national standard for EHR aspects

  28. Standards Initiatives (cont. . .) The National Committee on Vital and Health Statistics(NCVHS) Workgroup on Computer-based Patient Records was created to help the Department of Health and Human Services (DOHHS) investigate and approve health care standards for the federal government to use to implement federal legislation.

  29. Landmark Events in Nursing and Computers Categories: • Early conferences, meetings • Early academic initiatives • Initial ANA initiatives • Initial National League for Nursing (NLN) initiatives • Early international initiatives • Initial educational resources • Significant collaborative events

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