Open Access
Yearb Med Inform 1994; 03(01): 95-102
DOI: 10.1055/s-0038-1637998
Review Paper
Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart

Hospital Information Systems: A Review in Perspective

Autor*innen

  • W. E. Hammond

    1   Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC, USA
Weitere Informationen

Address of the author:

W. Ed Hammond, Ph.D.
Duke University Medical Center
P.O. Box 2914
Durham, North Carolina 27710
USA

Publikationsverlauf

Publikationsdatum:
05. März 2018 (online)

 

Abstract

The demand for information for health care is increasing exponentially in volume, content and the number and geographical distribution of users. Most HIS systems commercially available today are based on designs and philosophies of the 1970s. Even though new technology has improved these systems’ performance, to meet current demands, concepts must be shifted from the paper-driven system to an electronic system in which the patient is the focus. We need a merger of the functionality of existing systems along with new functionalities and a computer-based patient record. These new health care information system must have no boundaries; data collection must permeate all locations at which a patient receives care, and seamless linkages must connect all individuals who contribute to that patient’s care. Even though systems are being designed today to meet these expanded informational requirements, we will not see such systems in use before the next century.


 



Address of the author:

W. Ed Hammond, Ph.D.
Duke University Medical Center
P.O. Box 2914
Durham, North Carolina 27710
USA