The map is not the territory: the missing patient in the electronic medical record

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Publicado en:VINE vol. 44, no. 4 (2014), p. 548-557
Autor principal: Alshameri, Faleh
Otros Autores: Hockenberry, Debra, B. Doll, Robert
Publicado:
Emerald Group Publishing Limited
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Acceso en línea:Citation/Abstract
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100 1 |a Alshameri, Faleh 
245 1 |a The map is not the territory: the missing patient in the electronic medical record 
260 |b Emerald Group Publishing Limited  |c 2014 
513 |a Journal Article 
520 3 |a Purpose - This paper aims to, by looking at the electronic medical record (EMR) from three points of view, bring light to the dynamics that are essential and are currently missing in the USA. The traditional paper medical record has worked for physicians, management and patients since the beginning of practice. Yet the development of the EMR did not begin with all the essential elements of the traditional record that were working, but instead shreds out important aspects of the patient. Design/methodology/approach - Triangulation between three studies - medical, information technology and management studies. Findings - An efficient EMR has to take into consideration more than just one area of study. The dynamics between departments and users of the EMR need an integrated process that includes the necessary pieces of all involved. This hole has not been addressed in academic literature. Research limitations/implications - The paper triangulates three areas - medicine, management and information management. Most research on the EMR focuses only on one or two of these areas' concerns. Looking at the three sides of the EMR is important to get a solid understanding of the dynamics that can occur relaying a patient's story through various departments and uses. Practical implications - There is a depth, space and volume crucial to the comprehensive nature of medicine. With a perspective or dimension, necessary dialogues can be addressed and more intuitive tacit knowledge from medical expertise can be made available. A prototype, filling the holes of the observed elements in this paper, is possible by using digital objects and including more information than the data of the day. Bringing accountability to the patient, more expertise to the fingertips of the physician and available data for management purposes area are the key ingredients for an effective EMR. Social implications - With a comprehensive EMR that works more effectively for those who input the data, the patient's story can be documented with more detailed efficiency. Filling the holes of the observed elements in this paper all support better healthcare and long-term results for the health of society. Originality/value - The paper triangulates three areas - medicine, management and information management. Most research on the EMR focuses only on one or two of these areas' concerns. Looking at the three sides of the EMR is important to get a solid understanding of the dynamics that can occur relaying a patient's story through various departments and uses. 
651 4 |a United States--US 
653 |a Accountability 
653 |a Medicine 
653 |a Information technology 
653 |a Bioinformatics 
653 |a Decision making 
653 |a Patients 
653 |a Codes 
653 |a Endocrinology 
653 |a Medical records 
653 |a Internal medicine 
653 |a Methods 
653 |a International conferences 
653 |a Information systems 
653 |a Electronic health records 
653 |a Documentation 
653 |a Computer terminals 
653 |a Knowledge 
653 |a Information sources 
653 |a Physicians 
653 |a Practitioner patient relationship 
653 |a Prototypes 
653 |a Tacit knowledge 
653 |a Research 
653 |a Medical technology 
653 |a Data 
653 |a Information management 
653 |a Experts 
653 |a Health services 
653 |a Triangulation 
653 |a Health care 
700 1 |a Hockenberry, Debra 
700 1 |a B. Doll, Robert 
773 0 |t VINE  |g vol. 44, no. 4 (2014), p. 548-557 
786 0 |d ProQuest  |t ABI/INFORM Global 
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