Beschreibung
InhaltsangabeI. General Informatics.- 1. Nursing Informatics: The Unfolding of a New Science.- 2. On the Interaction Between Health Informatics, the Individual, and Society.- 3. Information Technology Developments: Issues for Nursing.- 4. Toward a Uniform Language for Nursing in the US: Work of the American Nurses Association Steering Committee on Databases to Support Clinical Practice.- 5. A New Paradigm for Computer-Based Nursing Information Systems: Twenty Care Components.- 6. Nursing Intervention Lexicon and Taxonomy: Preliminary Categorization.- 7. An International Classification for Nursing Practice.- 8. Evaluating Information Support for Guideline Development.- 9. Computerlink: An Innovation in Home Care Nursing.- 10. Combining Telecommunications and Interactive Multimedia Health Information on the Electronic Superhighway.- 11. The Electronic Community: An Alternative Health Care Approach.- 12. Nursing Collaboratory Development via the Internet.- 13. Data Protection and Nursing: A Technical and Organizational Challenge.- 14. Structuring Nursing Data for the Computer-Based Patient Record (CPR).- 15. Educating Nurses to Maintain Patient Confidentiality on Automated Information Systems.- 16. Data Bank-A Model System for Assuring the Public's Health, Safety, and Welfare.- 17. A Conceptual Model of the Information Requirements of Nursing Organizations.- 18. Utilizing Computer Integration to Assist Nursing.- 19. Role of the Nurse in Implementing Nursing Information Systems.- 20. An Integrated Nursing Management Information System: From Concept to Reality.- 21. Knowledge and Knowledge Acquisition for the Development of Expert Systems for Nursing.- 22. A New Nursing Vision: The Information Highway.- II. Clinical Practice.- 23. Interfacing and Linking Nursing Information Systems to Optimize Patient Care.- 24. How to Harness the Power of Information Technology to Benefit Patient Care.- 25. Capturing and Using Clinical Outcome Data: Implications for Information System Design.- 26. Information Technology and the Management of Preventive Services.- 27. Computerized Nursing Information Systems: Benefits, Pitfalls, and Solutions.- 28. Design and Development of an Automated Nursing Note.- 29. The Patient Problem/Nursing Diagnosis Form: A Computer-Generated Chart Document.- 30. Information Management in Ambulatory Care: The Nurse and Computerized Records.- 31. A Data Model for an Automated Nursing Tool to Support Integrated Rapid Care Planning in a Multiple Patient Assignment.- 32. Information Seeking by Nurses During Beginning-of-Shift Activities.- 33. The Patient-Oriented Bedside Terminal.- 34. Benefits of Bedside Terminals-Myth or Reality?.- 35. Point of Care Terminals: A Blessing or a Curse?.- 36. Information Systems in Critical Care: A Measure of Their Effectiveness.- 37. Bedside Computerization of the ICU, Design Issues: Benefits of Computerization Versus Ease of Paper and Pen.- 38. Using the Actigraph to Measure Activity-Rest in the Acute Care Setting.- 39. Expert Systems: Automated Decision Support for Clinical Nursing Practice.- 40. Evaluation of an Artificial-Intelligence-Based Nursing Decision Support System in a Clinical Setting.- 41. Process Control: Clinical Path Analysis.- III. Nursing Administration.- 42. The Registration of a Nursing Minimum Data Set in Belgium: Six Years of Experience.- 43. Standardized, Comparable, Essential Data Available Through the Nursing Minimum Data Set.- 44. An Evaluation Study of Off-The-Shelf Patient Classification Systems.- 45. The Role and Scope of Data Management in a Changing Health Services Delivery Environment.- 46. Nursing QA-Standard-Setting Forces and Automation.- 47. Bedside Nursing Information Systems: Quantities and Costs.- 48. Savings and Other Benefits Experienced from Use of a Computerized Bedside Documentation System.- 49. Comparing Information on Medical Condition and Nursing Care for the Management of Health Care.- 50. Nursing Care Cost and Resource Consumption Management.- 51. The Relat