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  2. Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Health_Information...

    The objectives/measures have been divided into a core set and menu set. EPs and eligible hospitals must meet all objectives/measures in the core set (15 for EPs and 14 for eligible hospitals). EPs must meet 5 of the 10 menu-set items during Stage 1, one of which must be a public health objective. [17]

  3. Health network surveillance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Health_network_surveillance

    Health network surveillance also has a proactive impact by providing business intelligence and network monitoring that can improve a health organization's efficiency and effectiveness through real time information that can support decision making about network architecture, business processes and resource allocation. Two approaches enable the ...

  4. Public health surveillance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_health_surveillance

    Syndromic surveillance is the analysis of medical data to detect or anticipate disease outbreaks.According to a CDC definition, "the term 'syndromic surveillance' applies to surveillance using health-related data that precede diagnosis and signal a sufficient probability of a case or an outbreak to warrant further public health response.

  5. Health information technology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Health_information_technology

    International health system performance comparisons are important for understanding health system complexities and finding better opportunities, which can be done through health information technology. It gives policy makers the chance to compare and contrast the systems through established indicators from health information technology, as ...

  6. Health data - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Health_data

    Recent advances in health information technology have expanded the scope of health data. Advances in health information technology have fostered the eHealth paradigm, which has expanded the collection, use, and philosophy of health data. EHealth, a term coined in the health information technology industry, [7] has been described in academia as

  7. Electronic health records in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electronic_health_records...

    Federal and state governments, insurance companies and other large medical institutions are heavily promoting the adoption of electronic health records.The US Congress included a formula of both incentives (up to $44,000 per physician under Medicare, or up to $65,000 over six years under Medicaid) and penalties (i.e. decreased Medicare and Medicaid reimbursements to doctors who fail to use ...

  8. Ethics of technology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethics_of_technology

    The ethics of technology is a sub-field of ethics addressing ethical questions specific to the technology age, the transitional shift in society wherein personal computers and subsequent devices provide for the quick and easy transfer of information. Technology ethics is the application of ethical thinking to growing concerns as new ...

  9. Health services research - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Health_services_research

    Health services research (HSR) became a burgeoning field in North America in the 1960s, when scientific information and policy deliberation began to coalesce. [1] Sometimes also referred to as health systems research or health policy and systems research (HPSR), HSR is a multidisciplinary scientific field that examines how people get access to health care practitioners and health care services ...