D220 Competency 1, HealthCare Data Foundations

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Across
  1. 5. The process by which incorrect, incomplete, duplicate, or improperly formatted items are removed using special software designated for this purpose.
  2. 6. The ability to collect, store and retrieve data that are correct, current and complete to be used by authorized individuals when needed.
  3. 10. Advance nurses' competencies related to informatics. Primary objective was to develop a US nursing workforce capable of using electronic health records to improve the delivery of health care.
  4. 11. Expected to be educationally prepared to conduct informatics research and generate informatics theory and have advanced understanding and skills in information management and computer technology.
  5. 13. Manages health information and data: Clinical information systems (laboratory, pharmacy, patient care) and Administrative Information Systems (payroll, quality assurance, human resources).
  6. 18. Expected to have fundamental information-management and computer-technology skills and use existing information systems and established information-management practices.
  7. 19. Expected to have a specific area of expertise, be skilled in using information management and computer technology; have strong analytic skills to learn from relationships between different data elements; and be able to collaborate with the informatics nurse specialist to suggest improvement to systems.
  8. 21. Information that is processed and organized so that relations and interactions are identified. Synthesis of information from several sources to produce a single concept or idea.
  9. 23. The ability to read and understand the written word and numbers as well as the ability to recognize when information is needed.
  10. 25. A nurse with advanced skills specific to health-information management and computer technology. Has expertise in the systems development life cycle, and computer skills.
  11. 26. Systems that support patient care by managing financial and demographic information and providing reporting capabilities.
Down
  1. 1. Rewards providers and organizations for quality-driven care based on their ability to meet set quality measures and indicators.
  2. 2. Authorized incentive payments to specific types of hospitals and healthcare professionals for adopting and using interoperable health information technology and EHRS.
  3. 3. The area of healthcare that uses computer hardware, software, or infrastructure to record, retrieve, analyze, archive, secure, and share clinical administrative, and financial information. (examples are computers, tele-packs, vital signs machines, etc).
  4. 4. Large computerized database management systems used to access the patient data that are needed to plan, implement, and evaluate care. May also be known as patient care information systems.
  5. 7. Created by the North American Nursing Diagnosis Association to provide standardized terms for nursing diagnoses.
  6. 8. Its mission is to advance excellence in healthcare by producing evidence to make healthcare safer, higher quality, more accessible, equitable, and affordable.
  7. 9. Is the science and art of turning data into information.
  8. 12. Acronym to Advance nurses' competencies related to informatics. Primary objective was to develop a US nursing workforce capable of using electronic health records to improve the delivery of health care.
  9. 14. Smart systems capable of applying advanced clinical reasoning.
  10. 15. Is a specialized field that uses health information technology in the collection, analysis, and application of data to improve patient outcomes and healthcare delivery strategies.
  11. 16. Acronym that promotes the adoption and meaningful use of health information technology.
  12. 17. use of past and current data (ie from EHR's) to forecast the likelihood of an event.
  13. 20. Infrastructure which allows healthcare providers and allied healthcare professionals to appropriately access and securely share a patient's vital medical information electronically—improving the speed, quality, safety, and cost of patient care.
  14. 22. Refers to the way data becomes a product that can be used to positively affect patient care. These elements have certain hierarchical structures.
  15. 24. Large data sets that help identify patterns and trends that need the use of technology to analyze its output.