Sailing Into the Wind:
Details
This book examines the first 10 years of policy implementation for Health Information Technology (HIT) in three patient safety systems (Barcode Medication Administration (BCMA), Computerized Prescriber Order Entry (CPOE), and Electronic Health Records (EHRs). since the landmark IOM report, To Err Is Human (2000) showed that 98,000 deaths occur in hospitals each year due to preventable medical errors. After ten years, there are still relatively few hospitals that have implemented these strategies. Descriptive statistics were examined of the means as an aggregate, and for each system, to determine a rank order for implementation barriers and policy impacts. Thirteen null hypotheses were constructed and tested for each system, a total of 39 hypotheses. Within each hypothesis 14 implementation barriers and 7 policy impacts were tested. We failed to reject all hypotheses with the independent variable of age, but found significant findings at the p.05 level (reject the null hypothesis) for other hypotheses, particularly for implementation barriers by executive group. Qualitative data were most revealing with significant new findings from the group of nurse executives interviewed.
Autorentext
Agatha Nolen, Ph.D.-Studied Public Administration at Tennessee State University. Director in Regulatory Compliance Support at Hospital Corporation of America (HCA), Nashville, TN.
Weitere Informationen
- Allgemeine Informationen
- Sprache Englisch
- Titel Sailing Into the Wind:
- Veröffentlichung 09.02.2012
- ISBN 3846587842
- Format Kartonierter Einband
- EAN 9783846587843
- Jahr 2012
- Größe H220mm x B150mm x T16mm
- Autor Agatha Nolen
- Untertitel Ten Years of Public Policy in Health Reform to Improve Patient Safety with Health Information Technology
- Auflage Aufl.
- Genre Medizin
- Anzahl Seiten 256
- Herausgeber LAP LAMBERT Academic Publishing
- Gewicht 399g
- GTIN 09783846587843