|
|
Consumer Informatics:
Applications
and Strategies in Cyber Health Care

|
 |
HON is
pleased to announce that Consumer
Informatics: Applications and Strategies for Cyber Health Care,
co-edited by HON board member
Marion Ball, and Rosemary
Nelson, has been named 2004 Book of
the Year Award winner by the .
The HIMSS Book of the Year Award honors a book
that offers "outstanding practical guidance and/or strategic
insight for healthcare information and management system professionals".
The Award will be presented during the Annual
Conference (13-17 February in Dallas). |
The choice of Consumer Informatics: Applications and Strategies for Cyber Health Care as HIMSS Book of the Year reflects the shift in ownership of health information away from a professional monopoly, toward a shared model. Patients and physicians now collaborate in a two-way exchange, with benefits not only for the economy, but for the individual and for the society as a whole.
This book explores the evolving fields of consumer health informatics
and telemedicine with reports on the electronic medical record, patient
safety, and quality care. Each chapter describes the role of computers,
technology, and telecommunications as enablers within a specific application
focused on the needs of consumers. The applications covered are ones
which empower consumers as they seek information, analyse their health
care needs, and make decisions about their own health care. Such applications
empower professionals in their efforts to serve patients, while increasing
the knowledge of the consumer.
Health On the Net Board
members have left their stamp throughout the volume. In her preface,
Marion Ball outlines the history of consumer
health informatics and its promise of empowered health consumers. Charles
Safran’s introduction entitled, “Care at a
Distance”, then sets out the case for patient-centered ICTs
in a healthcare environment
where time is at a premium. In the opening chapter, “Collaborative
Healthware”, Dr. Safran goes on to describe one such system,
linking parents with their hospitalised preterm infants. When patients
can provide
input and receive instructions from their healthcare providers, and research
their condition or that of a loved one guided by their physician, they
are empowered to be more effective participants in their own care. Dr.
Safran writes,
"Clinicians need to embrace virtual patient
visits as a way to revitalize our deteriorating relationship with our
patients. We need
to design technology around the kind of care we seek to provide rather
than responding piece-meal to administrative burdens. While adding more
sophisticated technology to broken social systems almost never solves
the human problem, sometimes high tech and also produce high touch. This
book shows us how."
In Chapter 7, "Steps Toward Reliable Online Consumer Health Information", Ron
D. Appel and Celia Boyer describe the evolution of health information
from traditional knowledge and the origins of science to today's Internet.
The general public now enjoys unprecedented access to health sources
representing divergent interests, but steps need to be taken to protect
consumers from potentially harmful information. An ethical code of conduct
based on disclosure, the HONcode and other consumer-oriented tools developed
by HON are presented to a wide audience in Consumer Informatics.
"Patient Empowerment, Cybermedicine and Citizen Education", authored by Patrice Degoulet et al, discusses the impact of new enabling technologies on patient and physician. Due to issues of equity, cybermedicine alone will not bring about patient empowerment. Transfer of responsibility from health professional to the patient does not mean reduced liability for the physician. To fully benefit from the potential of cybermedicine will require cultural and educational changes on the part of both groups.
Consumer Informatics: Applications and Strategies for Cyber Health
Care also includes chapters on: Patient-Centered Communication;
Disease Management and Home Telehealth; and Biothreats and Disaster Management.
The
book's
audience includes healthcare professionals, healthcare administrators,
IT professionals, health informaticians and students.
|