Term
In 2012, healthcare accounted for how much of the GDI?
|
|
Definition
|
|
Term
In 2012, healthcare accounted for how much of the GDI |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
The Title II administrtive simplification act aimed to improve the u.s. health system efficiency by introducing standards governing the use and communication of electronic data exchange? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Emerging research & medical data tell us that if patient-ppl are more engaged in their healthcare processes & maintaining their health, their health status outcomes will improve? |
|
Definition
False
pg. 9 (common sense) |
|
|
Term
W/o well managed HIS used to support key work processes such as clinical care & administrative functions, data would still be created & captured for use in databases for analytical & business intelligence purposes? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
The progression & maturation of HIS through the HIS conceptual model consists of |
|
Definition
Foundation
Use
Learning/knowledge
change
pg. 16 |
|
|
Term
public health organizations are entities that only enhance the public health? |
|
Definition
False (Protect & Enhance)
pg. 18 |
|
|
Term
Poorly applied software, no matter how impressive or fancy, hinders an organization's forward movement? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What are the factors that contribute to social media strategy? |
|
Definition
Manage risk
Establish presence
Take action
pg. 36 |
|
|
Term
The major categories of HIS |
|
Definition
clinical care
institutional business
clinical intelligence & quality
infrastructure |
|
|
Term
Data centers are the facilities where HIS are located & are vital to the successful implementation & ongoing support of providing healthcare applications? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the transfer of specifically structured information from one machine to another, without himan interaction.
|
|
Definition
Electronic data interchange
(EDI) |
|
|
Term
Some of the ongoing security activities that are designed to ensure that network, server, application, & data base systems are configured in a highly secur manner |
|
Definition
system hardening
vulnerability assessments
penetration testing
|
|
|
Term
The stimulus that has provided the greatest encouragement & incentives for hospitals & physician providers to invest money & time in the daunting task of automating their organizations & practices using HIS |
|
Definition
American Recovery & Reinvestment Act
pg. 7 |
|
|
Term
represent secondary uses of data |
|
Definition
quality monitoring groups
payers
government
communities
patient populations |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
the original patient care & administrative transactions |
|
|
Term
Increased requirements for e-prescribing & incorporating lab results are included in state 2 of meaningful use criteria? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
The correct progression of the HIS conceptual model |
|
Definition
foundation (HIS)
use (informatics),
learning/knowledge (business/clinical intelligence, data, & analytics)
change
pg. 16 |
|
|
Term
examples of a national public health organization |
|
Definition
centers for disease control and prevention
public health institute
rural assistance center |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
its own set of HIS strategies
projects
goals
objectives |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
the interpretation of the organization's strategic plan intot he IT language of systems, infrastructyure, data, expertise, information, & connectivity
pg. 31 |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Clinical transactional/functional support systems
patient/providerr/clinical care activities
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
administrative transaction/functional support systems
institutional business activities |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
clinical management/decision support systems (BI/CI)
clinical reporting, data analytics, outcomes analysis |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
administrative management/decision support systems (BI/CI)
business reporting, data analytics, key performance indicators analysis |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
software applications that share data from separate databases |
|
|
Term
next generation firewalls |
|
Definition
address the traffic inspection & application awareness drawbacks of stateful inspectiion firewalls
are replacing those traditional firewalls |
|
|
Term
can provide rapid, automated & full system data recovery in less than a minute, but are the most expensive. they have a distance limitation of either 200 miles or a data transfer round trip time of 10 milliseconds |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
improve on the tepid site capability, with the difference being that all systems & data from the primary site are copied over, although noncritical systems will operate in a degraded mode
|
|
Definition
|
|
Term
similar to cold sites, but have the data from the organization's critical systems copied over using basic SAN replication |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
facilities that have hardware & software availabale for use, but are shared w/other organizations & contain no data from the primary data center |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
provide web-based content and access to applications & databases for users who are outside of an organization |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
a type of health information system that combines data from several different systems & gives an organization a method for tracking quality metrics |
|
Definition
quality management system |
|
|
Term
enables an organization to eliminate the physical location of a piece of data & includes eliminating paper records |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
software development lifecycle |
|
Definition
conceptual planning
planning & requirements definition
design
development & testing
implementation
operations & maintenance
Disposition |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
distributed antennae system
DAS |
|
Definition
a network of antenna nodes separated by distance & connected to a common source for the purpose of providing wireless service within a geographic area or structure |
|
|
Term
healthcare organizations are leveraging remote hosting by engaging a third-party webhosting company to manage their external web content? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
a technology designed to integrate mobile devices using the WLAN |
|
Definition
voice over wireless local area network
VoWLAN |
|
|
Term
managed security services are not cost-effective information security services provided to healthcare organizations by consulting or vendor companies? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
protecting the organization from taking on too much risk with the HIS and technology projects
ensuring the job is getting done properly & in a timely fashion
ensuring adequate personnel resources & skills sets are available |
|
|
Term
interfaced systems are highly preferable to integrated systems? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
The electronic highway or infrastructure supports the communication between software systems used by clinicians & business people responsible for day-to-day services & management of the organization? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
HIS strategy should be to build information technology capabilities & systems that enable organizational strategy & goals? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
poorly applied softwar, no matter how impressive or fancy, hinders an organization forward movement? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
4 essential themes that feed into a solid understanding of HIS strategy |
|
Definition
1. the organizational strategy, which serves as the foundation for HIS planning
2. the HIS planning framework
3. HIS decision-making processes
4. the context of the changing national HIS stragtegy, consumer expectations, & the realities of the HIS marketplace for products & services |
|
|
Term
a primary use of HIS data is to connect patients, provicers, & data is to support the delivery & management of patient care? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
a secondary use of HIS DATA IS TO CONNECT PATIENTS, PROVIDERS, & DATA? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
entities that exist to protect & enhance the public's health? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
To Err is Human estimated that 44,000 to 98,000 deaths occur in hospitals due to avoidable errors. This number was greter than motor vehicle accidents, breast cancer, & AIDS deaths combined? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
One of the administrative simplification rules of the HIPAA of 1996 established a Unique Identifier Rule & created standards for the DEA number |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
increasingly, CEOs of healthcare institutions & providers working in healthcare organizations have realized that they can achieve the best outcomes in organizational performance by increasing involvement of who in this process |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
In the 1980s & 1990s some of the pioneering work that led to the development of EHRs was done in military healthcare settings? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Original patient care & administrative transactions represent a secondary use of data? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Software applications that share data from separate databases are considered |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
A cardinal rule of HIS planning is that planning must occur & be approved based on feasibility before the first projects are approved & underway? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
When planning HIS implementation, the most important step is selecting & procuring HIS technology? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
The 3 layers of the OSI model that are combined to create the Application layer in the TCP/IP model |
|
Definition
Application, Presentation, and Session
pg. 63 |
|
|
Term
load balancing is often used with applications & databases? |
|
Definition
False
it is used with web servers, file servers, & various network devices
pg. 72 |
|
|
Term
One of the most sited reasons for HIPAA violations are related to laptops that are lost or stolen with ePHI that is not encrypted? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
The use of a user name & password is an example of a two factor authentication? |
|
Definition
false
this is a single factor authentication
pg. 79 & 80 |
|
|
Term
two-factor authentication |
|
Definition
Something the user knows & has in his/her possession
user name & password plus smart card |
|
|
Term
electrical power consumption is the most costly operational expense related to a data center, other than the capital cost? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
examples of a clinical infomration system application |
|
Definition
radiology information system
pharmacy information system
laboratory information system |
|
|
Term
healthcare innovations today commonly incorporate new technologies such as mobile devices, geonmic capabilities, and high-speed networks? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
To Err is Human focuses on one caregiver or provider |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
corporate intelligence is a popular term for the value realized by flexibility analyzing comprehensive stores of data represented the totality of an organization or provider scope of data activity? |
|
Definition
false
It's business intelligence
pg. 15 |
|
|
Term
healthcare program offered by the department of verteran affairs |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
There are 3 essential themes that feed into the solid understanding of the Health Information System strategy? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
a directory or database that contains data about the data elements in the system of an organization |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
healthcare organizations have purchases licenses for many of these vendor applications, also known as COTS products resulting in healthcare data centers to be filled with many "best of breed" applications? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
data centers are the facilities where HIS are located & are vital tot he successful implementation & ongoing support of providing heatlh heatlhcare applications? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
a critical technology that is designed to automate & intelligently ahnalyze system logs for anomalies & inappropriate activity |
|
Definition
security information event management
SIEM |
|
|
Term
adverse patient outcomes related to poor quality have improved since the 2 seminal IOM reports were published more than a decade ago? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
seminal laws that have been created in response to the unsustainable escalation of healthcare costs |
|
Definition
1. the HIPAA of 1996
2. the American Recovery & Reinvestment Act (ARRA) of 2009
3. the Affordable Care Act (ACA) of 2010 |
|
|
Term
public health organizations serve as a "safety net" by providing health care for patients who are uninsured or underinsured? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the first step in understanding where an organization needs to put its efforts & resources is to define its mission, vision, & values? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
infrastructure is the "electronic highway" that carries what between the myriad of users of the systems & technology, all at the speed of light |
|
Definition
1. data
2. images
3. voice
4. information traffic |
|
|
Term
application integration is one way to eliminate application and data silos and to help organization achieve efficiencies & healthcare reform criterias? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
a term to describe the electrical transmission of data among systems, whether through analog, digital, or wireless media |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
perhaps one of the fastest growing network technologies in today's heatlhcare environment? |
|
Definition
wireless local area networks (WLANs) |
|
|
Term
in Crossing the Quality Chasm, 6 aims that were outlined as necessary to improve the quality of health care. |
|
Definition
safe
effective
patient centered
timely
efficient
equitable |
|
|
Term
the stimulus with the greatest impact on HIS has been the ARRA of 2009,which included |
|
Definition
HITECH
health information technology of economic & clinical health |
|
|
Term
Information is created by the aggregation & compilation of single units of data? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
external reporting organizations that health care providers submit reports, safety practices, outcomes of care, & costs to |
|
Definition
DHH
cardiac reporting organization
tjc |
|
|
Term
patient care can be enhanced by using a master patient/person index, which is a unique patient identifier, allowing data associated with the MPI to be pulled in from many data repositories to be accessed by clinicians |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
dematerializing information: |
|
Definition
eliminates the paper trail and enables separation of information from physical structures
allows organizations to be called "flat" which allows collaboration & fluidity of infomration to occur among all team members
|
|
|
Term
commercial, off the shelf products are the best applications to use as they are easy to integrate and interoperate with other applications
|
|
Definition
false
not developed to integrate or interoperate with other applications |
|
|
Term
examples of clinical information systems |
|
Definition
1. laboratory, pharmacy, radiology, & medical imaging systems
2. nursing & physician documentation systems
3. ambulatory care & outpatient systems
4. quality & performance management systems |
|
|
Term
president bush signed several initiatives into law to provide "seed grants" to fund pilot projects testing various uses of IT in healthcare settings? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
HIPAA's administrative simplification rules include |
|
Definition
transactions and code sets rule
unique identifier rule
enforcement rule
privacy rule & security rule |
|
|
Term
the use of information systems and technology to redesign, improve, & recreate the way work is done in disciplines such as the practice of medicine, nursing, medical imaging, & public health |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
a quasi-regulatory organization that inspects & accredits hospitals based on their ability to meet a rigorous set of scored criteria & the Cardiac Reporting Organization |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
when data elements are shared by more than 1 application & these applications operate using data stored int he same database, they are |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
a map or visual representation showing the way data are organized according to their relationship to key elements of a process |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the essential themes that feed into a solid understanding of HIS strategy? |
|
Definition
1. the organizational strategy, which serves as the foundation for HIS planning
2. the HIS planning framework
3. HIS decision-making processes
4. the context of the changing national HIS strategy, consumerr expectations, & the realities of the HIS marketplace for products & servcies |
|
|
Term
an administrative application that manages billing & accounts receivable and is often integrated into a health provider EHR application |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
LANS that function similar to the Internet, providing web-based technologies that are accessible only to internal users of an organization are considered to be |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
in ambulatory settings in the U.S. and canaada, 10% - 30% of practitioners use EHRs? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
provides heatlh services-related information for rural america |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
programming language allows all HIS applications to operate by executing programming code? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
which software development life cycle stage comprises developing the preliminary & detailed designs, including how the system will meet functional requirements? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
open systems interconnection model |
|
Definition
layer 1 - physical layer
layer 2 - data link layer
layer 3 - network layer
layer 4 - transport layer
layer 5 - session layer
layer 6 - presentation layer
layer 7 - application layer |
|
|
Term
also known as the internet model
illustrates the process of sending data to a receiving device (data transfer). has 3 layers: application group, internetwork group, & hardware group |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
data, in its basic format, ultimately contributes & guides the work of researchers, policy makers, & individuals responsible for governmental, political, & legal decisions? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
hospitals are at the center of healthcare, as they are vital to the communities they service? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
disaster recovery planning is a critical area of business continuity planning and should include a backup or redundant system, using which methods? |
|
Definition
clustered - used w/applications & databases
load balanced - used w/web servers, file servers, & various network devices
mirrored - used to replicate & maintain synchronous copies of data between 2 or more SANs |
|
|
Term
act that included provisions for the development of standards for electronic prescribing |
|
Definition
medicare prescription drug improvement & modernization act of 2003 |
|
|
Term
RHIOs are a result of which act? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
classifications that networks can be categorized into
|
|
Definition
LANs
backbone networks
metropolitan area networks
wide area netowrks (WANs) |
|
|
Term
steps to be considered when developing a mobil computing strategy |
|
Definition
identify the key stakeholders
create policies, procedures, & an end-user acceptance agreement
understand regulatory, legal, & compliance requirements
develop mobile management strategies
define the technical architecture |
|
|
Term
the enforcement rule under HIPAA defines civil financial penalties for any HIPAA violation. it provides the teeth of the HIPAA regulations |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the federal government included HIS initiatives in its economic stimulus legislation to update the nation's infrastructure & elevate the technical sophistication of the healthcare system |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
provider organizations actively seek to have the ability to share information with other providers. their ultimate goal is to improve the timeliness of data availability, provide support in emergency situations, & reduce the need for duplicate tests? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the earliest HIS software products initially focused on |
|
Definition
financial and patient accounting/billing functions |
|
|
Term
frequently reported sentinel events |
|
Definition
wrong-side surgery
suicide
op/post-op complication
delay in treatment
medication error
patient fall |
|
|
Term
when data elements are shared by more than 1 application & these applications operate useing data stored in the same database, they are |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
system hardening, vulnerability assessments, & penetration testing are 3 ongoing security activities that are designed to ensure that network, server, application, & database systems are configured in a highly secure manner |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
features, functions, & capabilities of EHRs shown to improve care. |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
a computerized system that supports clinical diagnosis, treatment planning, & medical outcomes evaluations
|
|
Definition
clinical information system |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
introduced standards for data transmission protocol
require that providers & health plans participate if they are participating in Medicare
privacy & security of protected health information
preempted state law |
|
|
Term
initiative of the federal government works in conjunction w/the national health information infrastructure to establish standards for automation of clinical health data for public health reporting purposes |
|
Definition
public health information network |
|
|
Term
data communication networks consist of |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
redundant array of independent drives |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
mirrored disks
2 HDDs - 1 as the primary & the other as the secondary HDD
slow write speeds
expensive |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
distributs the common or redundant information (parity) to all HHDs in the configuration
requires minimum of 3 HDDs |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
combination of RAID 1 & RAID 5
fastest performance & highest availabillity
highest cost |
|
|
Term
software applications that share data from different databases |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
a popular term for the value realized by flexibly analyzing comprehensive stores of data representing the totality of an organization or provider's scope of activity |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
dedicated back-end computer systems designed to efficiently & cost-effectively store & transfer a healthcare organization's server data |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the primary networks used by desktop, servers, & networks & other devices to communicate when they are in close proximity w/each other |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
it is best to have the HIS strategic plan before having the organization's strategic plan? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
public health organizations depend on a variety of data sources to create public health information such as data from laboratories across the nation set up specifically for bio-surveillance & homeland security? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the most important & difficult role the steering committee is, once standards are established, |
|
Definition
enforcing & adherence to them |
|
|
Term
a technology that is designed to integrate mobile devices using the WLAN. this is particularly useful as more clinical applications are developed for use with smartphones, tablets, & portable computers
|
|
Definition
voice over wireless local area network
VoWLAN |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
application
transport
internet
network |
|
|
Term
groups that have unique mobile computing requirements |
|
Definition
end users
clinicians
management
IT staff
|
|
|
Term
data derived from various systems that support c.inical & financial transactions that can be combined to enable analysis that reveals insights into the entirety of the activities within the scope of that entity |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
a wide area network that provides service to large geographic areas through separate areas of coverage, referred to as cells. cell phones, smartphones, tablets, & hot spots are mobile devices commonly used to connect to |
|
Definition
wireless wide area network
WWAN |
|
|
Term
similar to thin-client computers, but offer the additional advantage of having no local hard drive or operating systems to secure or maintain |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
rely on a server to perform & store all data processing, & can be likened to client dumb terminals from the mainframe era |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
ACOs provide a narrow scope of service? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
making sure that data centers are modernized & secure is a very important aspect for healthcare organizations, another issue facing organizations is whether they can maintain their own data center or outsource. in most cases the popular option is contracting with a co-location due to high costs & complexities involved in an organization maintaining its own data |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
benefits offered by voice over wireless local area networks |
|
Definition
improves workflow & productivity
minimizes roam time & client connectivity issues |
|
|
Term
strategic plan is made up of |
|
Definition
executive summary
organization history
vision statement
mission statement
target population
community served
future issues
SWOT analysis
assumptions
goals & objectives
implementation strategies
organizational structure future plans
plans - buildings, technology, renovation
marketing plans
key relationships
future organizational policies
governing board plans - structure, role, responsibility
feasibility plan/pro forms
contingency plans |
|
|
Term
public health organizations are concerned with the health of population not with profit? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
when describing the elimination of paper information, we say that digital technology is ? information? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the methods & formats used to organize data in a computer |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
assign a unique address to each computer on the network |
|
Definition
dynamic host configuration protocol
DHCP |
|
|
Term
sentinal event that is most often reported to TJC |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the title of HIPAA that includes the administrative simplification act |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
given the way it was highlighted in to err is human, it is clar that a HIS strategic plan should serve as a roadmap for the organization's strategic plan |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
components of a data center management system |
|
Definition
power protection & distribution
intelligent cable management
asset management & tracking
kvm ports & remote access
enclosure & rack space management
air conditioning & environmental controls |
|
|
Term
the sizes of healthcare data centers are increasing due to advances in server & storage consolidation, virtualization, & cloud computing? |
|
Definition
false
the size is decreasing |
|
|
Term
the internet is considered this type of network |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the electronic highway that carries data, images, voice, & information traffic between the myriad users of the systems & technology, all at the speed of light. the foundation of an organization's HIS & technology plan |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the pathway by which messages between servers &/or clients travel
|
|
Definition
|
|
Term
3 categories of cloud computing |
|
Definition
infrastructure-as-a-service
platform-as-a-service
software-as-a-service |
|
|
Term
this type of cloud computing places the least reliance on the vendor for services |
|
Definition
infrastructure-as-a-service |
|
|
Term
all business strategies & clinical initiatives of the organizaiton must be addressed from a HIS perspective? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
all computer systems
networks
the data those systems create & capture through the use of software |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
foundation
use
learning/knowledge
change |
|
|
Term
the regional health information organizations provide health services related information for rural america? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
a system that can further enhance stewardship of finances, human resources, & materials management |
|
Definition
enterprise resource planning |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
the organizational strategy |
|
|
Term
describes the methods & formats used to organize data in a computer into records, files, & arrays?
|
|
Definition
|
|
Term
the part of the administrative simplication ruule that establishes EDI standards for healthcare claims |
|
Definition
transactions & code sets rule |
|
|
Term
the important control that ensures the security of all data traffic containing confidential or ePHI information, such as network traffic, web activity, email messaging, file transfers, text messaging, & instant messaging |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
enble departments to easily update & manage web-based content on the corporate intranet &, in some cases, on the organization's externally facing website |
|
Definition
enterprise web content management servers |
|
|
Term
well-built and properly managed computer systems are the foundation of all HIS layers? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
4 purposes of effective governance |
|
Definition
1. provides assurance that the HIS & technology plans align with the strategic goals of the organization.
2. protects the organization from taking on too much risk w/the HIS & technology projects
3. ensures adequate personnel resources & skills sets are available to these disruptive initiatives
4. ensures itself that the job is getting done properly & in a timely fashion |
|
|
Term
Main goals of automation in health care? |
|
Definition
improve quality of care
improve efficiency of care
improve administrative processes |
|
|
Term
2 main drivers of change in health care |
|
Definition
unsustainably high cost
inadequate quality |
|
|
Term
6 key aims for improving quality of care |
|
Definition
safe
effective
patient-centered
timely
efficient
equitable |
|
|
Term
role of HIS in health care cost & quality issues |
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Definition
speed up existing processes
enable new ways of providing health care |
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Term
4 reasons for problems in quality |
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Definition
growing complexity of science & technology
increase in chronic illness
inadequate use of information technology
payment system that provides conflicting incentives & does not reward quality improvement |
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Term
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Definition
Australia
New Zealand
Netherlands
UK |
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Term
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Definition
systems & their management
health informatics
data & analytics
research, policy, & public health |
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Term
progression through maturation of HIS through the HIS Model |
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Definition
foundation (HIS)
use (informatics)
learning/knowledge (data & analytics; business/clinical intelligence)
change (conduct research; formulate & implement policy; improve the public's health) |
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Term
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Definition
enable organization's strategies |
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Term
Organization's strategic plan |
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Definition
serves as a roadmap for HIS strategic plan |
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Term
vendors tend to specialize by |
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Definition
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Term
quadrant left hand column |
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Definition
transaction/functional support systems |
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Term
quadrant right hand colume |
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Definition
management/decision support systems (BI/CI) |
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Term
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Definition
clinical/provider heatlhcare functions and services |
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Term
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Definition
business/institutional administrative functions of organization |
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Term
knowledge management supported in which HIS quadrants |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
process of disciplined decision-making for HIS projects & arbitration of issues arising during change process. |
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Term
If you learn nothing else from HCAD 750, at least remember this: |
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Definition
1. HIS is a tool facilitating the achievement of the mission of a healthcare organization
2. HIS should be aligned with the organization's goals
3. HIS will be used more in your subsequent careers in the healthcare industry than any other topic |
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Term
Software Development Life Cycle methodology stages
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Definition
1. conceptual planning
2. planning & requirements definition
3. design
4. development & testing
5, implementation
6. operations & maintenance
7. disposition |
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Term
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Definition
1. can bridge disparate systems
2. create silos
3. difficult & complex to maintain |
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Term
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Definition
1. allows data to be shared between disparate systems
2. uses a common data element & database |
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Term
Types of clinical applications |
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Definition
ehrs
cis
lis
pis
mar
cpoe
ris
mis
pacs
op systems
phr
long-term care systems |
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Term
2 key areas of technology for supporting voice & data |
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Definition
telecommunications
networking |
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Term
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Definition
local area networks
backbone networks
metropolitan area networks
wide are networks
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Term
2 classifications of networks |
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Definition
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Term
7 layers of the OSI model |
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Definition
1. physical layer
2. data link layer
3. network layer
transport layer
session layer
presentation layer
application layer |
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Term
4 layers of the internet model |
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Definition
network group layer
internet group layer
transport group layer
application group layer |
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Term
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Definition
wireless access points
radio frequencies
power-over-ethernet switches |
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Term
wide area networks connect |
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Definition
users on LANs to other LANs or other WANs |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
wireless wide area networks |
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Definition
provide service to large geographic areas called cells
called broadband or cellular networks |
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Term
distributed antennae system is useful for |
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Definition
increasing in-building RF coverage. |
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Term
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Definition
dedicated back-end computer systems designed to efficiently and cost-effectively store & transfer a healthcare organization's server data |
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Term
2 types of storage area networks |
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Definition
fiber channel sans
network attached storage |
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Term
redundant array of independent drives |
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Definition
RAID 1 (mirrored disks)
RAID 5 (with or without a hot spot)
RAID 10 |
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Term
unified communications technologies |
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Definition
instant messaging & presence
VoIP & VoWLAN
Video & web conferencing
digital signage & wayfinding
internet protocol television |
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Term
types of cloud computing in health care |
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Definition
infrastruction-as-a-service
platform-as-a-service
software-as-a-service
EMR-as-a-service |
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Term
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Definition
describes the processes & steps a healthcare organization puts in place to ensure that its essential business functions will continue during & after a disaster |
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Term
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Definition
tape-based
disk-based
virtual tape libraries |
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Term
redundancy between data centers |
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Definition
cold sites
tepid sites
warm sites
hot sites |
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Term
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Definition
specialized computers that are designed to process or "serve" computing requests, such as requests for database information, application processing, or file transfers & storage |
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Term
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Definition
central processing units
randam access memory
input/output & internal bus systems
keyboard, video, & mouse over IP
access to storage, network, & backup systems |
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Term
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Definition
describes the computers and devices used by end users
categorized as either stationary or mobile devices |
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Term
stationary computers include |
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Definition
all-in-one computers
wall-mounted computers
thin- and zero-client computers
electronic tracking board systems |
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Term
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Definition
an electronic record of health-related information on an individual that can be created, gathered, managed, & consulted by authorized clinicians & staff w/in one healthcare organization |
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Term
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Definition
an electronic record of health-related information on an individual that conforms to nationally recognized interoperability standards and that can be created, managed, & consulted by authorized clinicians & staff across more than one healthcare organization |
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Term
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Definition
open systems interconnection model (OSI)
Internet model |
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