IT225 and 525 Health Informatics
Margaret
Menzin Office:
S209
Phone: X2704
Email:
menzin@simmons.edu
Home Phone: 781-862-5107
Office
Hours:
Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays 9:00- 11:00; and also
Mondays 2:30-7:00 and Wednesday afternoons by appointment and Fridays 1:00 - om (schedule ahead; I sometimes have meetings then.)
Note:
There are some classes missed because of the Monday holidays.
These classes will be made up on an evening or by adding an extra hour to other meetings.
Mechanics of This Course
Texts:
Scheduling: One or both of the classes we miss
because of the two Monday holidays will be made up at a time convenient to all.
There will be the following three projects required, each of which will count equally towards your grade:
Grades:
Each of
the exams and projects will be worth 25% as will be participation in the postings.
General
Philosophy of This Course
This
course focuses on the knowledge and skills needed by people who are interested
in learning how information technology is used in the health care industry. It
includes all the material recommended for undergraduate students by the
American Nurses Association, but also encompasses a significant amount of
additional material on the Electronic Health Record and on database issues. .
It is the aim of this course for you to learn not only the skills that are
currently useful, but also to build a conceptual base from which your knowledge
will continue to grow over the course of your career. For example, when we
discuss databases, not only will you learn how to use Access, but you will also
learn about more general issues of concurrency, designing to avoid anomalies,
access control, etc.
This
will be a very 'hands on' course. You will learn a significant part of the
material working at a computer in the 'on-line learning' part of the course;
additionally, you will be at a computer in at all our meetings. We will also
meet, during some labs, with nurses and other health information professionals
to see major information systems and investigate how the theoretical issues play
out in practice.
Finally,
this course is being offered in a blended format. An extensive discussion of
the philosophical and practical implications of 'blending' this course, as well
as the rhythm of a blended course, may be found in the welcome letter for this
course (in this eLearning site.) If you have not yet read that letter you
should read it now.
Goals for the course:
Accommodations
for Special Needs:
Reasonable
accommodations will be provided for students with documented physical, sensory,
systemic, cognitive, learning, and psychiatric disabilities. If you have a
disability and anticipate that you will need a reasonable accommodation in this
class, it is important that you contact the Academic Support Center Director at
617-521-2471 early in the semester. Students with disabilities receiving
accommodations are also encouraged to contact their instructors within the
first 2 sessions of the semester to discuss their individual needs for
accommodations.
Course Outline
1.
Overview of Information Systems (1 week: module 1) - HC Chapters 1, 2
and 6
Hardware,
software, network architecture, integration of handhelds
with computer systems, major applications of IT to nursing and health care.
2.
Modeling Health Care Problems with Spreadsheets (3 weeks: modules 2 3
and 4)- Gr Excel Ch.1-7 less a few pages specified in the modules
Mastery
of Excel to solve problems such as seeing how a medicine decays in the body,
what happens if a dose is skipped, how to schedule a department etc.
3.
Organizing Health Information with Databases (4-5 weeks) - HC Chs. 3, 12,
14; Gr Access Ch. 1- 6
Introduction
to the key ideas in database design (consistency, restricting access of various
users, recovery from failures, etc.). Design of your own databases for small
problems using Access: designing the database, querying it, and generating
reports.
4.
IT systems and issues in Health Care and the Electronic Health Record (1
1/2 week) - HC -
Examination
of major (large) database systems found in hospitals, and the various
technologies and initiatives in implementing the Electronic Health Record
(EHR). Guest lecturers from major commercial systems and a chance to ask how
they perform relative to nurses' and other providers' expectations and needs.
5. Finding and Evaluating On-line Information (1 1/2 weeks) -: HC Ch. 4, 5, 24 and 25;
Tools for professionals to evaluate on-line information; tools to help patients evaluate information. Critiquing other sites.