Bibek (CIS)
Bibek (CIS)
Bibek (CIS)
The purpose of Health IT is to provide better care for patients and help achieve health equity.
Health IT supports recording of patient data to improve healthcare delivery and allow for
analysis of this information for both healthcare practitioners and ministry of health/government
agencies. This data is used for the implementation of policies in order to better treat and prevent
the spread of diseases.
Health IT improves the quality of healthcare delivery, increases patient safety, decreases medical
errors, and strengthens the interaction between patients and healthcare providers. In low and
middle-income countries the need for reliable and affordable medical record software is
paramount. The Open MRS community helps meet this specific need by developing and
supporting the Open Medical Record System an open source electronic health record platform,
specifically designed for low-resource environments, and is completely free.
Patients that suffer from disease and ailments directly benefit from Health IT because of the
improved level of care. The benefits of electronic health records include: Better health care by
improving all aspects of patient care, including safety, effectiveness, patient-centeredness,
communication, education, timeliness, efficiency, and equity.
Disparities in access to health information, services, and technology can result in lower usage
rates of preventive services, less knowledge of chronic disease management, higher rates of
hospitalization, and poorer reported health status.
Both public and private institutions are increasingly using the Internet and other technologies to
streamline the delivery of health information and services. This results in an even greater need
for health professionals to develop additional skills in the understanding and use of consumer
health information.
The increase in online health information and services challenges users with limited literacy
skills or limited experience using the Internet. For many of these users, the Internet is stressful
and overwhelming even inaccessible. Much of this stress can be reduced through the application
of evidence-based best practices in user-centered design.
Equally challenging will be helping health professionals and the public adapt to the changes in
health care quality and efficiency due to the creative use of health IT. Continual feedback,
productive interactions, and access to evidence on the effectiveness of treatments and
interventions will likely transform the traditional patient-provider relationship. It will also
change the way people receive, process, and evaluate health information. Capturing the scope
and impact of these changes and the role of health IT in facilitating them will require
multidisciplinary models and data systems.
Conclusion
Such systems will be critical to expanding the collection of data to better understand the effects
of health IT on population health outcomes, health care quality, and health disparities. Patients
that suffer from disease and ailments directly benefit from Health IT because of the improved
level of care. The benefits of electronic health records include: Better health care by improving
all aspects of patient care, including safety, effectiveness, patient-centeredness, communication,
education, timeliness, efficiency, and equity.