
Understanding Health Communication Technologies
Jossey-Bass (Publisher)
1st Edition
Published on 1. September 2004
Book
Hardback
400 pages
978-0-7879-7105-2 (ISBN)
Description
Understanding Health Communications Technologies provides a hands-on guide for students and professionals for effective investment in deployment of management of communication technologies in health settings. Employing case studies that enhance understanding and insight this book guides readers in appropriate technology selection, and long-term strategic management. This book provides an overview of the distribution and use of communication technologies within the health field and includes information about current and emerging synchronous and asynchronous health care communications technologies. It is filled with illustrative examples of real-life projects that have succeeded and provides lessons learned from projects that failed. The thirty-eight case studies cover topics such as management and operations, implementation, communication, outcomes, education, patient care, policy, unique applications, and technology. In addition, each case study includes discussion questions and references. Written by editors Pamela Whitten and David Cook and a panel of highly experienced contributors, this book offers students and health care professionals practical approaches to evaluating and selecting communications technologies for improving health services delivery.
More details
Series
Edition
1., Auflage
Language
English
Place of publication
New York
United States
Publishing group
John Wiley & Sons Inc
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
Illustrations
Dimensions
Height: 24.2 cm
Width: 18.7 cm
Thickness: 32 mm
Weight
782 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-7879-7105-2 (9780787971052)
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions
Pam Whitten | David J. Cook
Understanding Health Communication Technologies
Book
10/2013
1st Edition
Jossey-Bass
€117.74
Shipment within 15-20 days
Persons
Pamela Whitten is an associate professor in the Department of Telecommunications at Michigan State University. She is also a senior research fellow for Michigan State University's Institute of Healthcare Studies.
David Cook is director of Health and Technology Outreach at the Kansas University Medical Center, Kansas City, Kansas.
Content
Figures, Tables, and Exhibits.
Preface.
Foreword.
The Editors.
The Contributors.
PART ONE: IMPLEMENTATION.
1. Problems with Implementation: The Story of a Home Telecare Trial.
2. Challenges in Launching a Malaysian Teleconsulting Network.
3. Social Aspects of Implementing a Medical Information System: Cure or Symptom?.
4. Telemedicine at Shriners Hospitals for Children: One Size Does Not Fit All.
PART TWO: MANAGEMENT AND OPERATIONS.
5. Home Telehealth: Overcoming Buy-In Issues.
6. A Model for Persuading Decision Makers and Finding New Partners.
7. Leadership Issues Facing an E-Start-Up Management Team.
8. A Health Care Information System in Greece: Key Factors, Self-Organization, and Take-Home Lessons
9. The Anatomy of Failure? Teledermatology in an English City
PART THREE: COMMUNICATION.
10. Research as Dialogue: Health Communication and Behavior Change in Patients' Natural Habitat
11. Diagnosing the Communication Infrastructure in Order to Reach Target Audiences: A Study of Hispanic Communities in Los Angeles
12. The Role of Telehospice in End-of-Life Care
13. Doctor and Patient Interactions During Telemedicine: Clashes of Perceptions and Reality
PART FOUR: OUTCOMES.
14. Teletherapy for Childhood Depression: Where Is the Evidence?
15. Serving Children with Disabilities in Rural Iowa
16. Crisis Telehealth as a Cost Management Strategy
17. Using Point-of-Care to Reduce Medication Errors
18. The United Kingdom Virtual Outreach Project
19. The Financial Side of a Tele-Oncology Practice
PART FIVE: EDUCATION.
20. The Role of the Internet in Prostate Cancer Survivors' Illness Narratives
21. Successful Web Site Construction and Management: Harnessing the Skill and Enthusiasm of Volunteers
22. Multimedia Education for Gestational Diabetes Patients
23. New Paradigms for Continuing Education: Training Providers How to Use Technology
24. Telehealth in Cyberspace: Virtual Reality for Distance Learning in Health Education and Training
25. The SEEDS Project: From Health Care Information System to Innovative Educational Strategy
PART SIX: UNIQUE APPLICATIONS.
26. Bringing Care Home to the Rural Elderly: Clinician and Patient Satisfaction with Telehealth Communication
27. Systemwide Rollout of Doctor-Patient Secure Web Messaging: The University of California, Davis, Virtual Care Experience
28. Low-Vision Reaching Out Through Telemedicine: The Process of Implementing One Ophthalmic Subspecialty
29. Internet-Based Specialty Consultations: A Study of Adoption Challenges
30. Telerehabilitation: A Harvest of Multidisciplinary Services
PART SEVEN: TECHNOLOGY.
31. Sustainable Security: Building Virus and Vulnerability Management into an Organization's Culture
32. Designing Technology: A Case of Vendor and Provider Partnership
33. Behind the Applications: Making Technology Transparent
PART EIGHT: POLICY.
34. Policy and the Origins of the Arizona Statewide Telemedicine Program
35. The Long and Winding Road to Medicare Reimbursement
36. Addressing Barriers to Access for Uninsured in Western New York State: WNYhelpnet.org.
37. Using Computer Technologies to Provide Relevant Cancer Information to Vulnerable Populations: The NCI Digital Divide Pilot Projects.
38. Bridging the Digital Divide: Lessons from the Health InterNetwork India.
Name Index.
Subject Index.