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  2. Health administration informatics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Health_Administration...

    This fundamental change in health care (pay for performance) means that hospitals and other health care providers will need to develop, adapt and maintain all of the technology necessary to measure and improve on quality. Physicians have traditionally lagged behind in their use of technology (i.e., electronic patient records).

  3. Workgroup for Electronic Data Interchange - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Workgroup_for_Electronic...

    In July 1992, WEDI published a report that outlined the steps necessary to make electronic data interchange (EDI) a routine business practice for the health care industry by 1996. The Workgroup envisioned the entire health care industry transacting business electronically, under a nationwide set of coding and format standards for all transactions.

  4. Practice management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Practice_management

    When general practice was a cottage industry, operating in the doctor's front room, the receptionist, and the manager, insofar as there was any management, was often the doctor's wife. In the 21st century the biggest practices in the UK now have more than 200,000 patients and hundreds of staff over dozens of sites.

  5. Why administrative health care costs are high and how they ...

    www.aol.com/why-administrative-health-care-costs...

    The health care sector could similarly reduce administrative costs by standardizing documentation and working within a centralized clearinghouse system. Second, health care leaders and ...

  6. Health information management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Health_information_management

    In addition, they may apply the science of informatics to the collection, storage, analysis, use, and transmission of information to meet legal, professional, ethical and administrative records-keeping requirements of health care delivery. [1] They work with clinical, epidemiological, demographic, financial, reference, and coded healthcare data.

  7. Hospital information system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hospital_information_system

    A hospital information system (HIS) is an element of health informatics that focuses mainly on the administrational needs of hospitals.In many implementations, a HIS is a comprehensive, integrated information system designed to manage all the aspects of a hospital's operation, such as medical, administrative, financial, and legal issues and the corresponding processing of services.

  8. Computerized physician order entry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computerized_physician...

    The application responding to, i.e., performing, a request for services (orders) or producing an observation.The filler can also originate requests for services (new orders), add additional services to existing orders, replace existing orders, put an order on hold, discontinue an order, release a held order, or cancel existing orders.

  9. Health informatics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Health_informatics

    An example of an application of informatics in medicine is bioimage informatics.. Dutch former professor of medical informatics Jan van Bemmel has described medical informatics as the theoretical and practical aspects of information processing and communication based on knowledge and experience derived from processes in medicine and health care.