34 hours ago · In the wake of more widespread use of health IT, the Department of Health and Human Services asked the IOM to evaluate health IT safety concerns and to recommend ways that both government and the private sector can make patient care safer using health IT. The IOM finds that safe use of health IT relies on several factors, clinicians and patients among them. >> Go To The Portal
Specifically, it focuses on reducing the risks of health IT-assisted care, and it identifies areas of concern to help put the nation in a better position to fully benefit from health IT. Institute of Medicine. (2011). Health IT and Patient Safety: Building Safer Systems for Better Care.
This book provides recommendations for developing a framework for patient safety and health IT (information technology). Specifically, it focuses on reducing the risks of health IT-assisted care, and it identifies areas of concern to help put the nation in a better position to fully benefit from health IT. Institute of Medicine. (2011).
Health IT and Patient Safetymakes recommendations for developing a framework for patient safety and health IT. This book focuses on finding ways to mitigate the risks of health IT-assisted care and identifies areas of concern so that the nation is in a better position to realize the potential benefits of health IT.
This call to action has led to a number of efforts to reduce errors and provide safe and effective health care. Information technology (IT) has been identified as a way to enhance the safety and effectiveness of care.
Health information technology has been touted as crucial to better health care, but a new report says an entirely new regulatory agency is needed to oversee this largely unregulated sector, which can also injure or kill patients if it’s not operating properly.
Several reasons health IT–related safety data are lacking include the absence of measures and a central repository (or linkages among decentralized repositories) to collect, analyze, and act on information related to safety of this technology.
Reporters can obtain a copy of the report by contacting the National Academies' Office of News and Public Information; tel. 202-334-2138 or e-mail news@nas.edu.
The report also notes the agency does not have the investigative capabilities, funding or manpower to regulate devices such as electronic health records, personal health records or health information exchanges. Then give them the resources, not develop an entire new agency. The FDA has the talent and experience.
In its report, the IOM committee says the FDA would likely restrict market innovation in health IT, which could also jeopardize patient safety. There has been little to no real "innovation" in health IT in well over a decade; if anything, the usability and quality has deteriorated.
Cook writes that health IT is considered a “Class III medical device,” that is to say, a device that performs integral medical functions, which the FDA already has the jurisdiction to regulate.
Patient engagement tools might reduce health disparities and improve the health of populations.
Denmark has had fully electronic patient records for 10 years, and countries such as the Netherlands, Australia, Singapore, and Canada also are much further along than the United States (see Chapter 2).
A HACCP system, primarily used by the food industry as a quality system, is a proactive and preventive approach to applying both technical and scientific principles to ensure the reliability, quality, and safety of a product (Dahiya et al., 2009).
Patient engagement tools might reduce health disparities and improve the health of populations.
Denmark has had fully electronic patient records for 10 years, and countries such as the Netherlands, Australia, Singapore, and Canada also are much further along than the United States (see Chapter 2).
A HACCP system, primarily used by the food industry as a quality system, is a proactive and preventive approach to applying both technical and scientific principles to ensure the reliability, quality, and safety of a product (Dahiya et al., 2009).