investigate informatics in healthcare and to apply professional, ethical, and legal principles to its appropriate use in healthcare technology.
Requirements:
· Research, compose, and type a scholarly paper based on the scenario provided by your faculty, and choose a conclusion scenario to discuss within the body of your paper. Reflect on lessons learned in this class about technology, privacy concerns, and legal and ethical issues and address each of these concepts in the paper. Consider the consequences of such a scenario. Do not limit your review of the literature to the nursing discipline only because other health professionals are using the technology, and you may need to apply critical thinking skills to its applications in this scenario.
· Use Microsoft Word and APA formatting. Consult your copy of the Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association, as well as the resources in Doc Sharing if you have questions (e.g., margin size, font type and size (point), use of third person, etc.). Take advantage of the writing service Smart Thinking, which is accessed by clicking on the link called the Tutor Source, found under the Course Home area.
· The length of the paper should be four to five pages, excluding the title page and the reference page. Limit the references to a few key sources (minimum of three required).
· The paper will contain an introduction that catches the attention of the reader, states the purpose of the paper, and provides a narrative outline of what will follow (i.e., the assignment criteria).
· In the body of the paper, discuss the scenario in relation to HIPAA, legal, and other regulatory requirements that apply to the scenario and the ending you chose. Demonstrate support from sources of evidence (references) included as in‐text citations.
· Choose and identify one of the possible endings provided for the scenario, and construct your paper based on its implications to the scenario. Make recommendations about what should have been done and what could be done to correct or mitigate the problems caused by the scenario and the ending you chose. Demonstrate support from
The collecting, storage, retrieval, and use of healthcare information to guarantee effective collaboration between patients and their healthcare professionals is referred to as health informatics. It’s an important aspect of healthcare reform, as it’s an evolving specialization that connects healthcare, communications, and information technology (IT) to improve patient care quality and safety. Health informatics is defined as “the interdisciplinary study of the design, development, adoption, and use of IT-based advances in healthcare services delivery, management, and planning,” according to the National Library of Medicine of the United States. Moving to such a powerful platform has two goals: improving healthcare quality and lowering healthcare expenses. If the appropriate formulas are used, these two seemingly antagonistic forces can operate together.
as historically been framed by sociologists as ‘the angel of history’ aiming to ‘salvage the promise of progress (Buraway, 2005, p.260). However, despite this idealistic view, Virdee (2019, p.4) has illustrated how sociology has a history of obfuscating knowledge about issues surrounding race, mainly due to the fact that many of the founding fathers of sociology in the west were social darwinists, such as William Sumner, Lester Ward and Edward Ross in the USA. For instance, in British sociology where there has been a sophisticated tradition of deep scholarship on class, there has been an ignorance and reluctance to explore the relations between race and class despite the work generated by scholars in racism studies who have generated debates about the marriage between racism and capital (Bhattacharya, 2015; Hall, 1980). Bhambra (2014) has stated this divided in British sociological thought is so overt, that she states there is a separation between ‘two traditions’ in sociology – one black, the other white. This divided is most pronounced in the study of the relationship between race and capitalism. Bhambra has debunked the conventional beliefs about ‘the European ownership of modernity’ illustrating both the multiplicitous roots of the Renaissance period and has opened intriguing lines of enquiry about the importance of the enslavement and dispossession of humans from ‘the world beyond Europe’ in ‘contributing to the commercial growth that stimulated the development of the West’ (Bhambra, 2007, p.137). Marx’s primary contributions to sociological thought is to depict the fact that ‘what makes modernity modern is, first and foremost capitalism itself’ (Sayer, 1991, p.12). Therefore, what Bhambra posits, leads us to the scholarship surrounding the intricacies of the relationship between racism and capitalism, an area mainly labelled racial capitalism.