Documenti di Didattica
Documenti di Professioni
Documenti di Cultura
Group 1:
Taiwan
There
were 610 hospitals and 175,000 healthcare professionals in Taiwan in 2002, serving a population of 22.5 million. The healthcare professionals included 34.3% registered nurses and 17.7% licensed practicing
term NI was just first used on in Taiwan in 1990 At that time the focus was on Hospital Information System providing nursing data such as; nursing personnel information, care planning, and scheduling. Computers had been used in nursing education since the 1980s Formal Masters program focusing on NI was not available until 2001.
Pattern of long-term-care information system: 50% of long term-care institutes were not planning any investment 19% had installed information system.
Online courses are available for baccalaureate programs in counseling, teaching principles and strategies, and long-term care. In addition, some schools provide multimedia self-testing system. At least six graduate programs in health or medical informatics provide informatics trainings at masters level for student with nursing backgrounds: the National Yang-Ming University, the National Taipei College of Nursing, the National Chung-Chung University, Taipei Medical University, Chang-Gung University, and Tzu-Chi University. Among these six universities, the National Yang-Ming University, the National Chung-Cheng University, Taipei Medical University, and Tzu-Chi University have PhD programs with a current total of around 10 students with nursing backgrounds, but no PhDs have been awarded yet
research is still at its infancy in Taiwan, with only around 40 papers published in domestic nursing journals in the period 1994-2003. The first formal academic association on NI was set up in 2004, when a NI working group was organized within the Taiwan Association of Medical Informatics, which had been established in 1991.
Standardized
terminology such as existing nursing diagnosis classification systems and the ICNP have been translated for clinical use, and tests of their reliability and validity have been proposed in Taiwan Qualitative approaches such as interviews have been used to explore how well nurses will accept the change from manual charting to computerized documentation. Quantitative approaches such as surveys have been applied to investigate the attitude and satisfaction toward the use of personal digital assistants(PDAs) for charting and the storage of nursing records.
care plans are now common in clinical use. Moreover, decision support systems to test the integration of medical diagnoses and nursing diagnoses, and expert systems implemented on PDAs for the emergency triage system have been reported. Patient classification systems have also been applied for patient assessment, nursing interventions, and staff workload assignments.
Nurses
can chart vital signs and input and output laboratory data, medication, or medical history without having to go back to nursing stations.
ROC Biological and Medical Engineering Association and the Taiwan Association of Medical Informatics successfully obtained approvals from the international DICOM and HL7 organizations to become the members in 2000. The HL7 and DICOM have been widely adopted as the national standards by government, academic, and industrial institutes, notably by the Ministry of Health in Taiwan
national e-Taiwan program has been promoted by the Ministry of Health to promote the development of health informatics in Taiwan since 2002. Another, larger program (the National Health Information Infrastructure Program) is expected to start in early 2005. Both programs will enhance the development of NI in Taiwan.
Japan
Japan
750,000 nurses work at these hospitals, including 220,000 nurse aides 260,000 medical doctors, 90,000 dentists, and 230,000 pharmacists
began to pay attention to the use of computers in healthcare during the late 1970s following the increase use of computers in other industries.
hosted the IMIA(International Medical Informatics Association) conference MEDINFO80 in 1980
Japan
The
Japanese Association of Medical Informatics(JAMI) was founded at that time with the aim of supporting health informatics in Japan. research was focused on computerized billing systems for medical fess, and the development of the use of personal computers at an individual level(JAMI, 2004)
Initially
The
focus then shifted to research and development of systems at the organizational level.
Medical
information departments in about 50 national university hospitals have made the largest contribution to the development of health informatics in Japan. have been developing its own information systems for its own applications to clinical practice, education, and research.
Organizations
Third International Congress on Medical Informatics, MEDINFO80, organized by the IMIA, was held in Tokyo in 1980. universities offering baccalaureate programs and 40 universities offering graduate programs. Some baccalaureate programs and graduate schools include NI courses in their curricula.
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