Computers
Health Information Technology
Pharmacy Informatics
Documentatin Principles
Patient Monitoring Functions
100
Large, expensive, and powerful computer used to process large quantities of data
What is a mainframe?
100
Improved patient care, increased efficiency and productivity, improved communication and health care delivery
What are benefits of health information technology?
100
The paperless computer to computer transfer of prescription data among prescribers, pharmacies, and payers. Incurs a fee for pharmacies
What is e-prescribing?
100
Provide unique identification of each patient when recording or accessing information.
What is Unique Patient Identification?
100
Detects patients on drugs in the same pharmacologic-therapeutic classification
What is therapeutic duplication?
200
Components controlled by software
What is hardware?
200
Medication errors involved mislabeled bar codes and unclear computer screens, adverse events may occur because of strain on health care personnel if workflow becomes complicated
What are risks of health information technology?
200
Records of patient health information generated by one or more encounters in any care delivery setting. Recorded in a digital, interoperable standard.
What is Electronic Healthcare Record (EHR)?
200
Identify the minimum set of information required to complete the incident, observation, or intent; provide the means to ensure all recorded information meets legal, regulatory, institutional policy, or other requirements.
What is Completeness?
200
Discovers a drug that is identified as a drug allergy in the patient's medical record.
What is drug-allergy interaction?
300
Keyboard, mouse, trackball, microphone, touch screen
What are input devices?
300
Examines workflow processes and procedures for risks and inefficiencies
What is the joint commission recommendations?
300
Can be generated by physicians, patients, hospitals, and pharmacies. Controlled by the patient or legal proxy and is presented to the health care provider when and where the patient needs care.
What is Electronic Personal Health Record (ePHR)
300
Require use of standardized titles, formats, templates, macros, terminology, abbreviations, and coding; enable authorized data searches, indexing, and mining.
What is Retrievability?
300
Identifies medications that may cause problems if taken together.
What is drug-drug interactions?
400
"Brains" of the workstation
What is the processor?
400
Facilitates the transfer of prescription data among pharmacies, prescribers, intermediaries, and payers.
What are SCRIPT standards?
400
The portion of a clinical information system that enables a patients care provider to enter an order for a medication, clinical laboratory, or radiology test or procedure directly into the computer
What is Computerized Physician Order Enter (CPOE)?
400
Enable authorized practitioners to capture, share, and report information from any system, whether paper or electronic.
What is Interoperability across documentation systems?
400
Drugs that may cause problems with a patient's medical condition.
What is drug-disease interaction?
500
Provides the computer with a temporary workspace
What is memory?
500
Consists of seven pharmacy organizations.
What is Pharmacist Services Technical Advisory Coalition (PSTAC)?
500
Uses technologies that measure and analyze human body characteristics such as DNA, fingerprints, eye retinas and irises, voice patterns, facial patterns, and hand measurements for authentication purposes.
What is biometrics?
500
Demonstrate adherence to related legislation, regulations, guidelines, and policies throughout the documentation process; alert users to potential confidentiality and security breaches.
What is confidentiality and security?
500
Checks medication orders for potential problems with physical incompatibilities and stability.
What is intravenous (IV) compatibility?