Nursing and the informatics revolution
The Institute of Medicine’s quality initiatives have collectively emphasized the importance of information technology to the transformation of health care. Not coincidentally, federal initiatives in 2004 have signaled the start of “the decade of health information technology.” Building on those reports, this article describes the informatics revolution in process, and nursing’s readiness to move in that direction. The promise of informatics in reshaping practice is sketched out in terms of seven aims for improvement, followed by a listing of some of the issues that must be addressed for nursing to realize those possibilities. In similar fashion, changes in academia are discussed both in terms of the promise of informatics applications and the barriers to achieving that preferred future. The article ends with some policy recommendations and reflections on opportunities at hand, particularly the growing emphasis on patient self-management support.
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This article is an outcome of the author’s experience in 2003-04 as a Scholar-in-Residence at the Institute of Medicine (IOM), made possible through collaboration among IOM, the American Academy of Nursing, and the American Nurses Foundation. Additional support was provided by a grant from the Independence Foundation, and salaried leave from Indiana University-Purdue University at Indianapolis (IUPUI).
PII: S0029-6554(05)00043-6
doi:10.1016/j.outlook.2005.02.006
© 2005 Mosby, Inc. All rights reserved.
