760 likes | 1.48k Views
2. HOUSE KEEPING. This will be a 90 minute classRestrooms are locatedPlease turn off Cell Phones or place on vibrateIf you must answer a call, please leave the room.No questions during the presentation please!Questions written on the 3X5 card will be answered at the conclusio
E N D
1. 1 #501 Nursing Informatics: Today’s Emerging Roles Offer Innovative Solutions for Tomorrow Christine (Tina) Lund, MSN, RN, NEA-BC
Diane Ocean, MSN, RN
Kathryn Sapnas, PhD, RN, CCRN, CNOR
2. 2 HOUSE KEEPING This will be a 90 minute class
Restrooms are located…
Please turn off Cell Phones or place on vibrate
If you must answer a call, please leave the room.
No questions during the presentation please!
Questions written on the 3X5 card will be answered at the conclusion of the presentation.
For questions not answered, the question and the answer will be available on the web.
Before we get started we need to take care of some Housekeeping issues. Restrooms are located..
If you have any questions please write them on the 3X5 card provided. Answers to your questions will be posted on the VEHU website. So please check the website when you return home.Before we get started we need to take care of some Housekeeping issues. Restrooms are located..
If you have any questions please write them on the 3X5 card provided. Answers to your questions will be posted on the VEHU website. So please check the website when you return home.
3. 3 Presentation Outline
Introduction:
Tina Lund
VA Role & Contributions of Nursing Informaticists:
Diane Ocean
Kathryn Sapnas
Wrap-up:
Tina Lund
4. 4 Learning Objectives Describe the scope and standards for nursing informatics.
Describe the role of nursing informaticists in the VA.
Describe general contributions to clinical and administrative health operations.
List specific examples of how VA facilities have leveraged concrete benefits from utilizing Nursing Informaticists.
5. 5 Definition of Nursing Informatics “Nursing Informatics is a specialty that integrates nursing science, computer science, and information science to manage and communicate data, information, and knowledge in nursing practice. Nursing informatics facilitates the integration of data, information, knowledge, and wisdom to support patients, nurses and other providers in their decision-making in all roles and settings. This support is accomplished through the use of information structures, information processes, and information technology.”
(ANA Scope and Standards of Nursing Informatics Practice, 2008, pg 1)
6. 6 Definition of Nursing Informatics (2) Nursing informatics is using technology, research, and professional experience to manage nursing data, information, and knowledge to improve practice and deliver better health care.
Simpson, Roy (2006). In H. A. Park, P. Murray,& C. Delaney, C. (Eds.). Consumer-Centered Computer-Supported Care for Healthy People. Amsterdam, Netherlands: IOS Press, p 5
7. 7 Functional Areas of Nursing Informatics : ANA Scope and Standards of Practice Administration, leadership and management
Analysis
Compliance & integrity management
Consultation
Coordination, facilitation, & integration
Development
Educational & professional development
Policy development & advocacy
Research evaluation
8. 8 American Nursing Informatics Association ANIA started 1992 -first opportunity for informatics nurses in So California to meet and network. Non-profit organization with members across the US sharing common interests in informatics.
ANIA's Mission is to provide networking, education and information resources that enrich and strengthen the roles of nurses in the field of informatics.
ANIA's Purpose is to provide professional networking opportunities for nurses working in healthcare informatics and a forum for the advancement of nursing and nursing professionals in informatics.
9. 9 HIMMS 2005 Nursing Informatics Survey
Role of the Nurse Informaticist
-Understand the challenges
-Evaluate workflow process and implications
-Influence system design
-Optimize information/communication tools
-Address integration/interoperability
Source: HIMMS 2005 Survey of the impact of Health Information Technology on the Role of Nurses and Interdisciplinary Communication
10. 10 HIMMS: What is Nursing Informatics? Presentations, publications and surveys on the functions of the nurse informaticist:
http://www.himss.org/ASP/topics_FocusDynamic.asp?faid=243
Nursing and Informatics for the 21st Century: An International Look at Practice, Trends and the Future - Book (2/8/2008)
Nursing Informatics 2007 Workforce Survey - Who Are We Now? - Survey Result (2/8/2008)
Nursing Informatics 2004 Workforce Survey - Who are we? - Survey Result (2/8/2008)
Nursing Informatics 101 - Presentation (2/8/2008)
An Emerging Giant: Nursing Informatics - Other Pubs (11/13/2007)
11. 11 HIMSS 2007 Nursing Informatics Survey Nursing Informatics Job Titles
14% “clinical analysts”
14% “informatics nurse specialist” or “nursing informatics specialist”
9% “consultant”
40% identified “other”
Director of Clinical Informatics, Clinical Informatics Coordinator, Clinical Systems Analyst, Clinical Informatics Specialist
12. 12 Nursing Informatics Certification ANCC – 23%
Informatics Nurse
http://www.nursecredentialing.org/
CPHIMS – 3%
Certified Professional in Healthcare Information and Management Systems
http://www.himss.org/ASP/CertificationHome.asp
Other – 9%
None – 55%
13. 13 Alliance for Nursing Informatics & the TIGER Initiative
In 2007, ANI became the enabling organization for the TIGER (Technology Informatics Guiding Education Reform) initiative
The TIGER initiative seeks to better prepare practicing nurses and nursing students to use technology and informatics to improve the delivery of patient care
Phase one of TIGER engaged stakeholders to create a common vision of ideal EHR-enabled nursing practice
Phase two of TIGER will facilitate collaboration among participating organizations to achieve the vision
www.tigersummit.com
14. 14 Diane Ocean, MSN, RN
15. 15 Two Basic Topics
What can I (an Informatics Nurse) do for you, a Nurse Executive?
What can you do for me?
16. 16 A Day in the Life of a Nurse Admitting a patient
Admission Assessment in computer
Placing orders
Requesting consults
Sending data to VANOD
Resolving clinical reminders
These things involve a computer as well
Take V/S
Give medications
Consent for surgery
Make the bed
17. 17 A Day in the Life continued What if the computers are down?
Use the computer!
CPRS downtime
BCMA downtime
Computers are INTEGRAL to bedside practice
18. 18 What Can I Do For You? Workload statistics
Performance monitoring
Performance Improvement projects
Identification of problem areas
Before & After data
Regulatory compliance
19. 19 What Can I Do For You? How many new orders written on Ward X in a day?
How many medications given on Ward X in a week?
Nurses bypassing BCMA by using Manual Medication Entry
Show me all restraint orders for the past month
List patients in the hospital for >24 hours without a VANOD skin assessment
20. 20 What Can I Do For You? TJC
IG
CARF
CMS
OSHA IHI
Baldrige
Magnet
The Secretary
Grey’s Anatomy
21. 21 What Can I Do For You? Documenting patient education
Incorporated into daily charting
MRSA swabs
Ordered during Admission Assessment
VANOD skin assessment
Changed the directions to be more facility-specific
22. 22 What Can I Do For You? New applications
The job isn’t over when the software is implemented
Monitoring local usage
Reporting to Oversight bodies
Training
23. 23 What Can I Do For You? New employees
Student nurses
Updates
Annual education/competency
Ongoing reminders
24. 24 What Can I Do For You?
25. 25 What Can I Do For You? Software work groups
Beta testing
Maybe even Alpha testing?
For the brave among you
National presentations
Oversight boards
26. 26 What Can I Do For You? Keep an ear to the ground
Precepting
You fill in the blank!
27. 27 What Can You Do For Me? Keep me in the loop
Make your priorities clear to me
Support the highest possible level of computer access
Conferences
Other learning opportunities
Muscle prn
28. 28 Kathryn G. Sapnas, PhD, RN, CCRN, CNOR Chief Nurse, Research & Informatics
Miami VA Healthcare System
29. 29 Objectives
To describe the historical development and system redesign needed in creating a a department of Nursing Informatics (NI).
To identify the linkage of NI, quality & safety and NI’s role in the ANCC MagnetTM journey.
To highlight the leadership role in Nursing Informatics and relationship to care delivery.
30. 30 “Innovation distinguishes between a leader and a follower.”
Steve Jobs
“A leader has the vision and conviction that a dream can be achieved. He inspires the power and energy to get it done”
Ralph Nader
31. 31 Miami VA Healthcare System Urban tertiary academic medical center with outpatient primary and specialty care; acute, critical, long term, psychiatric, spinal cord injury & rehabilitation care beds.
VA Medical Care Complexity Group 1a (MCG1a).
10 locations of outpatient clinics that cover a 250 mile area across south Florida.
Nursing has 585.98 FTEE and a 65.5% RN staff mix.
32. 32 Safety, Quality and Informatics
33. 33 VHA Nursing Strategic Plan 2008-2012 National Nursing goals:
Nursing Practice Transformation
Evidence-Based Practice
Excellence in Leadership
Workforce Management Interconnected & Interdependent Critical Programs:
Informatics & Technology
Data Management
Research
Advanced Practice
34. 34 Miami’s Journey to Excellence New senior leadership team was put in place that included a new hospital Director and a Chief Nurse Executive, and Chief Nurse for Research & Education
Strategic vision was set and organization began a journey to excellence
Concurrent efforts toward Baldrige, Carey & MagnetTM designation
35. 35 Miami VA Nursing Informatics Team
36. 36 Overview of Miami Nursing Informatics Strategy: Build Nursing Informatics (NI) leadership, infrastructure & support for nursing administration, practice, education and research.
NI Vision: To become a model of integrated Nursing Informatics practice for VHA that provides accurate and useful information that will drive decisions for nursing and patient care. To develop and disseminate knowledge to improve the care of our veterans.
NI Mission: To collect, validate, & interpret quality data, while assessing and evaluating processes. To enable dissemination of information to administration that supports management decisions about staffing and nursing care. Finally, to conduct NI research.
37. 37 Miami VA Nursing Informatics Provide information technology consultation & assessment
Hardware - Network communication (wired/wireless)
Software - Wireless infrastructure
Conduct scheduled life cycle & technology assessments
Provide information management service
VANOD & NDNQI coordination
Administrative dashboards, update & report production
Staffing effectiveness reports
Performance improvement, nursing quality improvement metrics and analysis
Administrative dashboard development, Assure data validity & reliability
Consultation for Nursing, IRMS, and other healthcare system departments
38. 38 Miami VA Nursing Informatics Leadership role in BCMA, CPRS, and HIT systems coordination
Ergonomic, human factors & workflow assessment
Project management services encompassing health information technology implementations
Computer orientation & training on new upgrades in both CPRS and BCMA
Conduct research supporting evidence-based practice
Strategic NI Goal:
Move to another level of service from a less reactive problem solving team to a more proactive and visionary group which can better service all parts of nursing service with equal attention to priority issues and goals.
39. 39 Domains of NI Practice System Lifecycle
Human Factors
Information Technology
Information Management
Professional Practice
Models and Theories
40. 40 Functional Areas of Nursing Informatics Survey conducted by Sensmeier &
Weaver
776 respondents
Top 3 most frequent roles reported
System Implementation (45%)
System Development (41%)
Liaison (32%)
(HIMSS, 2007)
41. 41 Why Develop an NI department? Historical absence of administrative or informatics infrastructure
Disparate data sources and reports
Multiple manual reports that were not reconciled
No formal process for data validation
No formal process to assess data accuracy
Under resourced Nursing Management team
Culture change with new executive management style
42. 42 Where and How We Began Organization /Departmental Assessment
Multidisciplinary team building and capacity building
Nursing FTEE reallocated and Nursing Informatics structure was identified.
Assessment of data sources, structure, merging multiple data sources, assessing data accuracy and validity, representation and analysis.
43. 43 Where and How We Began Nursing-sensitive administrative and clinical indicators outcome assessment was identified early in 2004.
ProClarity purchased in late 2004; data sources were identified, data structure assessed, data extraction cubes were built.
Reports initially identified were: staffing costs, overtime, 1:1 care, and nursing demographics.
By 2006, Nurse Managers began using the dashboards to manage resources.
44. 44 IRMS
Data Management
Nursing
Pharmacy
Fiscal
Biomedical Engineering
Quality Management
Patient Safety
CACs
DSS
45. 45
46. 46
47. 47 NI Leadership Role Evidence-Based Practice
Computer literacy skills
Information literacy skills
Project Management skills
Change Management skills
Process Management skills
Information management and communication
Data analysis
Trending & forecasting
Resource Planning, Utilization & Evaluation
Technology Assessment
Administration
Safety & quality
Make judgments based on data trends & patterns
Consultant
Innovator
48. 48 NI Departmental Re-design 2004 Nursing Education
Reconceptualize program
Nursing Informatics
Develop Infrastructure
Recruit competent NI staff
Field assessment of BCMA technology
Performance Improvement
Assess data integrity
Research
Develop evidence-based approach to practice, education and administration
49. 49 Miami Nursing Positions 1 Chief Nurse Informatics & Research
Nurse Educator FTEEs (3) were converted to create NI department
3 Nurse Informaticists
1 Clinical Nurse Analyst
1 Staff Analyst (GS Series 343)
Traditional ADPAC role is integrated into all NI positions. Department also coordinates continuous readiness activities & performance improvement, and provides on-going education and staff professional development.
50. 50 Years 2004 - 2005 - 2006 Develop Staffing Effectiveness Reporting
Proclarity Data Repository
Develop Nursing Recruitment database and reports
Nursing Data Operations Committee
Develop procedures for DEMPS staff deployment and user access
Develop and Implement Nursing Disaster Technology Assessment
Implementation of Critical Care HIT
Develop Nursing Administrative Dashboards
51. 51 Natural History….Disasters 2004-2005
52. 52 ? ?? ?
53. 53 Disaster Nursing Informatics
54. 54 Nursing Informatics Technology Assessment
55. 55 BCMA 2005-2006 Phase 1 (2005)
Build multidisciplinary team
Implement effective project management principles
Carefully select point of care technology
Assess medication administration workflow
Assess point of care medication administration technology
Implement innovations to improve BCMA process
Phase 2 (2006)
Systematically evaluate newly purchased mobile medication workstations (MMW)
Continuously improve BCMA process
56. 56
57. 57 2006 Join NRC Picker Patient
Satisfaction Survey
Enter NDNQI
RN Satisfaction survey
Develop data collection process
Implement VetPro on-line Credentialing
Develop and test nursing overtime database
BCMA Cart formal evaluation
Staffing and statistical workload analysis
58. 58 Miami VAHC System Issues
59. 59 Nursing Certified Timesheets & Public Law
60. 60
61. 61 2007 BCMA Cart Upgrade
Wireless network assessment
VANOD
RN Satisfaction on-line survey coordination
Skin templates deployment
Work Injury
Nursing Network management structure developed
Developed On-line nursing continuing education modules
Refine nursing contingency plan for “down-time”
62. 62 Regulation and Governing Bodies Continuous Readiness
The Joint Commission
Department of Veterans Affairs Office of the Inspector General (OIG)
Department of Veterans Affairs Combined Assessment Program (CAP)
Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities (CARF)
63. 63
64. 64 Leverage Technology for Continuous Readiness “Push” Electronic Education on NPSGs supported “Just-in-Time” Training and education sessions
65. 65
66. 66 HANDS pre-implementation strategic planning
Wireless network upgrade - Pending
Redesign CPRS Nursing Initial Assessment - Work in Progress
Data collection on additional NDNQI indicators
VANOD skin re-assessment monitoring
Develop skin champions
Assist in ONS Developing Ambulatory Workload Measure for Facility Workload Report
E-proficiency implementation - Pending
Critical Care “PICIS” Nursing Handoff Tool
Developing staff driven measurement of clinical effectiveness
67. 67 Summary NI/CNE dyad partnership critical to visionary nursing Leadership
Strong NI/CNE dyad assures immediate and future needs of patients and staff are supported
Recognition of Nursing Informatics team value in support of clinical excellence is crucial to any healthcare organization’s success
Quality, safety & excellence provide the framework rationale to support a dynamic Nursing Informatics infrastructure
68. 68 Implications Evaluation of the organization’s current Informatics infrastructure should be conducted
Annually
Anytime upgrades are made
As patient populations served change
As care delivery programs change
69. 69 Leadership Pearls DREAM, DARE, AIM to be an INNOVATOR
Keep abreast of “latest greatest” technology trends
Assess newest technology for “fit” and potential applicability in the clinical environment
Leverage technology to improve quality, safety & nursing outcomes as you continue the ongoing journey toward innovation and clinical excellence
70. 70 Summary NI/CNE dyad partnership critical to visionary nursing Leadership
Strong NI/CNE dyad assures immediate and future needs of patients and staff are supported
Recognition of Nursing Informatics team value in support of clinical excellence is crucial to any healthcare organizations success
Quality, safety & excellence provide the framework rationale to support a dynamic Nursing Informatics infrastructure
System redesign process to develop a Nursing Informatics infrastructure supports data-driven decision making and performance improvement
71. 71 Conclusions Conduct a NI gap analysis
Assess current state of Nursing Informatics infrastructure
Conduct an organizational IT gap analysis
Evaluate quantity and expertise of healthcare facility IT staff- technical and clinical
Identify budget requirements & recruit personnel
Identify technology and software needed to support clinicians and Nursing Informatics staff
72. 72 Implications Ongoing evaluation of the organization’s current Informatics infrastructure should be conducted:
Annually
Anytime upgrades are made
As patient populations served and programs change
Nursing leadership must be sensitive to the importance of planning for adequate budgetary resources and impact on nursing care delivery
Personnel
Hardware
Software
Wireless infrastructure
73. 73 References
74. 74 References
75. 75 References Graves, J. & Corcoran, S. (1989). The study of nursing informatics, IMAGE, 21(4), 227-230.
Nannus, B. (1992). Visionary leadership. Jossey-Bass, Inc: San Francisco, CA.
Sapnas, K.G. (2007). Visionary nurse executive leadership using informatics as a tool. Department of Veterans Affairs, VA Electronic Health University, Presented July 18, 2007, Marriott World Center, Orlando, FL
Sapnas, K.G., Ward-Presson, K. Mangery-Curcio (2007). Nursing Informatics and Disasters: Developing a Disaster Focused Technology Assessment. Paper delivered at International Council of Nurses Meeting, Yokohama, Japan, June 1, 2007
Sapnas, K.G., Martin, W., Shelton, T., Hope, K., Ward-Presson, K. (2007). Wireless networks and point of care technology: implications for interdisciplinary collaboration. Computers, Informatics, Nursing. Computers Informatics Nursing, 25(5),308-309.
Technology Informatics Guiding Education Reform. Retrieved July 10, 2007 from https://www.tigersummit.com/uploads/TIGERInitiative_Report2007_bw.pdf
Ward-Presson, K., Sapnas, K.G., Mangery-Curcio, S. (2006). Disaster Nursing Informatics: Are you ready? Paper delivered at University of Maryland, 16th Summer Institute in Nursing Informatics, July 22, 2006, Baltimore, MD
Veterans Health Administration, VHA National Nursing Strategic Plan 2008-2012, Office of Nursing Service, Washington, DC
76. 76 Wrap-up
The emerging role of Nursing Informatics
Roles & responsibilities
Key contributions
The future of Nursing Informatics
77. 77 Questions?