Title: Effective Utilization of PDAs
1PowerPoint for NSG 6635Part 3
Kristenia Jones RNC Troy University School of
Nursing Fall 2006
2Effective Nursing Utilization of PDAs at the
Bedside
3"We are drowning in information but starved for
knowledge." -- John Naisbitt
4PDA usage provides the bedside nurse with the
latest information concerning treatments and safe
medication administration. Yet, despite the
documentation supporting use of the PDA, many
nurses are reluctant to adopt the new technology.
5Forrester's Consumers Technographics 2003 North
American Bench Mark Study found that only
559,800 nurses were using PDAs
6This reluctance may be due to a knowledge
deficit regarding basic computer and PDA skills
and the importance of new technology in the
delivery of safe, appropriate healthcare.
7An aging population of nurses who have had little
or no training in the use of information
technology.
Problem 1
8Problem 2
- Insufficient technical training at the
baccalaureate level.
9Problem 3
- Misconceptions about hardware functionality.
10Problem 4
- Cost PDAs and software can be expensive.
- Many nurses feel the employer should provide the
PDA just as they provide the monitors and
thermometers.
11SoWhat is the big deal about PDAs anyway?
- Effective utilization of a PDA at the patient
bedside is equal to having a world of pertinent
and timely information if the palm of your hand.
12To many nurses, this is what they think of when
they hear Palm Pilot
13According to the WHO, the Percentages of
physicians (47) and nurses (18) who currently
utilize PDAs in providing patient care.
14To address the education problem, the
National League for Nursing (2002) has made
infusing technology into concepts, structures,
and processes of nursing education one of the
nursing education research priorities in order to
ensure competency of nursing graduates for the
21st century practice.
15SoWhat is a PDA?
-
- The definition of PDA (Personal Digital
Assistant) is the common term for any handheld
mobile computing device that can fit in the palm
of your hand. - There are many to choose from.
16History of PDAs
17The first handheld device was developed in the
1984 by Psion. It preformed basic organizer
functions such as storage of appointments and
addresses.
18In 1993 Apple introduced the touch screen and
handwriting recognition capabilities with the
release of the Newton Message-Pad . The
Message-Pad was not widely accepted in the
medical community
19In 1996 US Robotics introduced the first Palm
Pilot
- Unfortunately it served more as an address book
than a health-care tool. - The Pilot 1000 listed for 299 and had capacity
- for 500 addresses, 600 appointments,
- 100 to-do items, and 50 memos.
-
-
April 4, 1996
http//www.cnn.com/TECH/9604/04
/pocket_computer/
20 Todays PDA
- The PDA found in the nurses pocket today is
capable of enhancing productivity by keeping
needed information at the bedside, reducing
medication errors by accurately identifying and
calculating correct medication and dosing. -
21Available Programs for Todays PDA
- Programs available today include entire nursing
text books, patient tracking tools, nursing
documentation programs, medication calculators
and nursing specific drug references
22The 1 Advantages of a PDA
- Accessibility The handheld device is there in
your pocket, no running back to the nurses
station to look up information. When minutes
count, the PDA is ready. -
23- Things to consider when purchasing a PDA
24WHAT WILL YOU USE IT FOR?
-
- Consider your needs and growth
- e.g. do you want phone and email with it or
just a simple reference tool - Consider your technology comfort and support
25Other Considerations
- Size, weight
- Screen Resolution
- Memory
- Business, Utility, Games, etc. Applications
- Medical Applications
- Multitasking Capability
- Accessory Availability
26Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (1999,
November). Medication errors and patient safety
Davenport, Colleen What Nurses Need to Know about
Personal Digital Assistants (PDAs) Spratley, E.,
Johnson Ph.D, A., Sochalski Ph.D, J., Fritz
M.S., M., Spencer, W. (2000, March). The
Registered Nurse Population. Diabetes nurses use
PDAs in patient care
The PDA cortex
Hassett Mimi. (2002, February). PDAs Leading the
information revolution.
McConnell EA. (2004, May) Get the right
information to the right people at the right time
Nursing Management
Rosenthal Kelli. Touch vs.tech Valuing
nursing-specific PDA software
World Health Organization (2004) Positioning
Technology to Serve Global Heart Health
27The End