Applied interdisciplinary theory in health informatics : a knowledge base for practitioners /
The American Medical Informatics Association (AMIA) defines the term biomedical informatics (BMI) as: The interdisciplinary field that studies and pursues the effective uses of biomedical data, information, and knowledge for scientific inquiry, problem solving and decision making, motivated by effor...
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Other Authors: | , , |
Format: | Electronic eBook |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Amsterdam, Netherlands :
IOS Press,
2019
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Series: | Studies in health technology and informatics ;
v. 263. |
Subjects: | |
Local Note: | ProQuest Ebook Central |
Table of Contents:
- Intro
- Title Page
- Foreword
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Contents
- Chapter 1. The Need for Theory to Inform Clinical Information Systems and Professionalise the Health Informatics Discipline
- Part 1. Information Science and Technology Theories
- Chapter 2. General System Theory and the Use of Process Mining to Improve Care Pathways
- Chapter 3. Information Theory and Medical Decision Making
- Chapter 4. Assessing Technology Success and Failure Using Information Value Chain Theory
- Chapter 5. Linking Activity Theory with User Centred Design: A Human Computer Interaction Framework for the Design and Evaluation of mHealth Interventions
- Chapter 6. Technology Acceptance Models in Health Informatics: TAM and UTAUT
- Part 2. Social and Psychological Theories
- Chapter 7. Distributed Cognition: Understanding Complex Sociotechnical Informatics
- Chapter 8. Using Actor-Network Theory to Study Health Information Technology Interventions
- Chapter 9. Collective Mindfulness and Processes of Sensemaking in Health IT Implementation
- Chapter 10. Fostering Shared Decision Making with Health Informatics Interventions Based on the Boosting Framework
- Chapter 11. Junior Doctor Communication Systems and the Deterioration Communication Management Theory
- Chapter 12. Resilient Health Care: A Determinant Framework for Understanding Variation in Everyday Work and Designing Sustainable Digital Health Systems
- Chapter 13. Health Behaviour Theory in Health Informatics: Support for Positive Change
- Chapter 14. Control Theory to Design and Evaluate Audit and Feedback Interventions
- Chapter 15. Implementing and Embedding Health Informatics Systems
- Understanding Organizational Behaviour Change Using Normalization Process Theory (NPT)
- Part 3. Synthesis.
- Chapter 16. The NASSS Framework
- A Synthesis of Multiple Theories of Technology Implementation
- Chapter 17. Reflecting and Looking to the Future: What Is the Research Agenda for Theory in Health Informatics?
- Subject Index
- Author Index.