
Nursing Informatics
Where Caring and Technology Meet
Springer (Publisher)
3rd Edition
Published on 30. March 2000
Book
Hardback
XXI, 447 pages
978-0-387-98923-5 (ISBN)
Article exhausted; check for reprint
Description
To meet the demands created for a new generation of nurses at the threshold of the millennium, the editors of Nursing Informatics have prepared this revised third edition of the premier reference text that has defined the role of technology in nursing. The book addresses three main areas: nursing informatics education, enabling technologies, and emerging trends. Core chapters and appendices from the first and second editions have been updated and expanded. New chapters on project management, consumer informatics, data mining, electronic medical imaging, and telehealth have been added by contributors who provided examples of integration of technology into nursing, rather than theory.
Readers will be apprised of the latest developments in:
¿ Curricula, competencies, and careers
¿ Clinical capabilities-usability, nomenclature, and data mining
¿ Approaches to projects and people
¿ Clinical support-decision making, and care delivery
¿ Telenursing, telehealth, and telecommunications
¿ Web and Internet-based resources
Marion J. Ball, Ed.D., is a professor at The Johns Hopkins University School of Nursing, a vice president of the First Consulting Group, a member of the Institute of Medicine. Coeditor of Springer-Verlag¿s Health Informatics series, she is actively involved in a wide range of health informatics applications in the public and private sectors.
Kathryn J. Hannah, R.N., Ph.D., is a professor in the Department of Community Health Sciences at the University of Calgary, and vice president and chief health informatician at Sierra Systems Consultants, Inc. She chairs the board of directors of HEALNet (Health Evidence Application and Linkage Network) and is coeditor of Springer-Verlag¿s Health Informatics serious.
Susan K. Newbold, M.S., R.N., is a doctoral candidate with emphasis on nursing informatics and an instructor at the University of Maryland, Baltimore. She is the founder and cochair of the Capital Area Roundtable on Informatics in NursinG (CARING), and associate editor of Computers in Nursing.
Judith V. Douglas, M.A., M.H.S.., is a manager at the First Consulting Group, and a lecturer at The Johns Hopkins University School of Nursing. A columnist for MD Computing, and a member of several editorial boards, she is a published writer and editor in the areas of nursing and healthcare informatics.
More details
Series
Edition
3rd ed.
Language
English
Place of publication
New York
United States
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Research
Edition type
Revised edition
Product notice
Laminated cover
Illustrations
24 s/w Tabellen, 62 s/w Abbildungen
62 black & white illustrations, 24 black & white tables
Dimensions
Height: 23.5 cm
Width: 15.5 cm
Thickness: 25 mm
Weight
1840 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-387-98923-5 (9780387989235)
DOI
10.1007/978-1-4757-3252-8
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
New editions

Ursula H. Hübner | Gabriela Mustata Wilson | Toria Shaw Morawski
Nursing Informatics
A Health Informatics, Interprofessional and Global Perspective
Book
07/2022
5th Edition
Springer
€85.59
Shipment within 7-9 days

Marion J. Ball | Judith V. Douglas | Patricia Hinton Walker
Nursing Informatics
Where Technology and Caring Meet
Book
12/2010
4th Edition
Springer
€139.09
Article exhausted; check for reprint
Additional editions

Marion J. Ball | Kathryn J. Hannah | Susan K. Newbold
Nursing Informatics
Where Caring and Technology Meet
Book
12/2010
3rd Edition
Springer
€86.62
Article exhausted; check different version
Previous edition
Marion J. Ball | Kathryn J. Hannah | Susan K. Newbold
Nursing Informatics
Where Caring and Technology Meet
Book
02/1997
2nd Edition
Springer
€85.59
Article exhausted; check for reprint
Persons
Content
Foreword; 1. Integrating Nursing and Informatics; 2. Informatics and Organizational Change; 3. Health Oriented Telecommunications; 4. Electronic Resources for Nursing; 5. Meaning of Informatics Nursing; 6. Careers for Nurses; 7. Images for the Nurse Analyst; 8. Selecting a Nursing Informatics Consultant; 9. Introducing Nursing IS in the Clinical Setting; 10. Nursing Unified Language System; 11. Nursing Data Elements; 12. Point of Care Information Systems; 13. Home Care; 14. Critical Paths, CareMap; 15. Imaging; 16. Usability; 17. Management IS; 18. HIS; 19. System Selection; 20. Implementation; 21. Project Management; 22. Consumer Informatics; 23. Data Mining; 24. Virtual Reality; 25. Education (Academic); 26. Education (CME, Patient); 27. Electronic Medical Imaging; 28. Nursing Informatics Competencies; 29. Telehealth and Implications; 30. Business Process Reengineering; 31. Nursing's Role in Telehealth; Appendices: Order Communications; Quality; Electronic Resources