Title: The Future of Computer Applications in Biomedicine
1The Future of Computer Applications in Biomedicine
2Looking back?
- Computerized records 1980s 1990s
- Electronic records 2000
- National Research Council 1997 We envision the
day when citizens no longer will have multiple
records of their health care encounters scattered
throughout the offices of numerous physicians
hospitals. Instead their records will be linked
electronically over the Internet so that each
person has a single virtual health record
distributed, but unified, summary of all the
health care they have received in their lives.
3How Do We Bridge The Gap And Deliver The Promise?
Metrics/Measurement Systems How do we collect
and share data between stakeholders?
Agreement On Healthcare Goals What
results/outcomes are valued?
Compensation Plans How do we align incentives to
secure delivery of the outcomes we value?
4Health Information Technology
- Its About The Information, Not The Technology
- The enhanced use of healthcare information
technology is a means to an enda critical tool
to - Collect data and provide decision support tools,
especially at the point of care - Share data between healthcare providers, payers,
policy makers, and consumers - The end is more effective and more efficient
healthcare purchased on the basis of value and
outcomes rather than just unit cost
5The Critical Importance Of HIT
- As healthcare starts to shift from an input
driven to an output driven model, outcomes
assessment tools become critical to drive
meaningful changes in provider compensation
systems - If empowered consumers dont have quality/value
information readily available, it is likely that
they will buy healthcare services solely on a
price basis
6Emerging Federal Approach To Nurturing HIT
- Focus on improving patient safety and
biopreparedness - Legislative and executive-branch efforts underway
- Federal Health Architecture (FHA)
- Consolidated Health Initiative (CHI)
- National Health Information Infrastructure (NHII)
- EHR functional model (in conjunction with private
sector) - e-Prescribing
7Telemedicine
- Using computers and telecommunications equipment
to deliver medical care at a distance. - -telepsychiatry
- -Teleoncology
- -Teledermatology
- -Teleradiology
8Remote Patient Monitoring Technologies Are
Beginning To Mature
9So What?
- New technologies will allow HIT to go places it
has seldom/never been before - Exam rooms
- Patients homes
- More information means we have a movie instead
of a photograph on how patients are doing,
thereby improving quality of care by detecting
changes in health status early
10Where HIT Needs To Be
11Balancing Cost and Value
RESULT Coordinated care Collaborative
relationships
RESULT Uncoordinated care Adversarial
relationships
12Forces affecting the Future of Medical Computing
- Legal considerations
- Health care financing
- Changes in the background of health professionals
13Assignment question 2.
- Answer question 2 in text.
- Imagine that you are a patient visiting a health
care facility at which the physicians have made a
major commitment to computer-based tools. How
would you react to the following situations?
14- (A)Before you are ushered into the examining
room, the nurse takes your blood pressure and
pulse in a work area and then enters the
information into a computer terminal located in
the nursing station adjacent to the waiting room.
15- (B)While the physician interviews you, he or she
occassionally types information into a computer
workstation that is facing the physician you
cannot see the screen
16- (C)While the physician interviews you, he or she
occasionally uses a mouse-pointing device to
enter information into a computer workstation
located such that, when facing the physician, you
cannot see the screen.
17- (D)While the physician interviews you, he or she
occasionally uses a mouse-pointing device to
enter information into a computer workstation
located such that you both can see. While doing
so, the physician explains the data being
reviewed and entered.
18- (E)While the physician interviews you, he or she
enters information into a clipboard sized
computer terminal that responds to finger touch
and requires no keyboard typing.
19- (F)While the physician interviews you, he or she
occasionally stops to dictate a phrase. A
speech-understanding interface processes what is
being said and stores the information in a
medical record system.
20- (G)There is no computer in the examining room,
but you notice that between visits the physician
uses a workstation in the office to review and
enter patient data. -
212.
- Now imagine that you are the physician in each
situation. How would you react in each case?
What do your answers to these questions tell you
about the potential effect of computers on a
patient-physician rapport? What insight have you
gained regarding how interactive technologies
could affect the patient-physician encounter? Did
you have different reactions to scenarios c d?
Do you believe that most people would respond to
these two situations as you did?